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Outcomes Research calls for papers / publications

13 calls for papers / publications listed in Outcomes Research 

Call for Papers for a Special Issue of the Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association: Recovery-Oriented Practice in Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing
08/01/2012
Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association

Call for Papers for a Special Issue of the Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association: Recovery-Oriented Practice in Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing

Guest Editors:
Kris A. McLoughlin,DNP, APRN, PMH-CNS, BC, CADC-II
Mary D. Moller DNP, ARNP, APRN, PMHCNS-BC, CPRP, FAAN

DEADLINE for article submission: AUGUST 1, 2012

In a 2005 Mental Health Declaration for Europe, the World Health Organization identified the need to “design and implement…mental health systems that promote…recovery.” According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s (SAMHSA) National Consensus Statement, Recovery is cited as the “single most important goal” for the mental health service delivery system (2006). Most recently, on December 22, 2011 the SAMHSA announced a new working definition of recovery as “A process of change through which individuals improve their health and wellness, live a self-directed life, and strive to reach their full potential”. Four major dimensions that support a life in recovery include health, home, purpose, and community along with 10 guiding principles: hope; person-driven; holistic; peer support; relationship and social networks; culturally-based and influenced; importance of addressing trauma; involving friends, family, community strengths, and responsibility; respect; and, the need for many pathways for recovery to occur.

The American Psychiatric Nurses Association (APNA) is one of five national participants in a SAMHSA initiative to transform the concepts of recovery from a set of beliefs to recovery-oriented nursing practices. As a profession, psychiatric-mental health nursing focuses on the person with the disease or disorder (not the disease or disorder itself). We assist people, through recovery-oriented interventions to adapt to their world and find personal meaning and purpose in their own real-life experiences as community members. This special issue will focus on the state of the science: How Psychiatric Nursing is understanding, integrating and developing recovery-practices and programs; and, how these practices affect outcomes.

Manuscript submission may include, but are not limited to:

Innovative recovery-oriented program development
Development, implementation, and evaluation of recovery-oriented practices or components of recovery practice
First-person accounts of recovery practice and related outcomes

Data-based manuscripts, quality improvement studies, state of the science / systematic literature reviews preferred. All manuscripts should be translational in nature by including key practice points for psychiatric nurses that can be implemented in the institutional or community healthcare setting.

Nurse Researcher, Psychiatric Nurse
Call for Papers: Maximizing Community Contributions, Benefits, and Outcomes in Clinical and Translational Research
08/06/2012
Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action

Call for Papers: Maximizing Community Contributions, Benefits, and Outcomes in Clinical and Translational Research

A thematic issue of Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action

Deadline for submissions August 6, 2012

Academic, Community Activist, Health Services Researcher, Physician Researcher, Public Health Expert, Social Scientist
Call for Manuscripts on Health Education and Promotion for the Journal of Midwifery & Women’s Health
08/01/2012
Journal of Midwifery & Women’s Health

Call for Manuscripts on Health Education and Promotion for the Journal of Midwifery & Women’s Health

The Journal of Midwifery & Women’s Health is soliciting manuscripts for the 2013 continuing education theme issues on Health Education and Promotion. We invite submissions that address optimizing women’s health and reproductive health outcomes. Potential topics include:

· Health education: beyond patient handouts

· Use of social media in health education and promotion

· Promoting healthy habits

· Health promotion recommendations by age group

· Obesity

· Cardiovascular disease prevention

· Diabetes prevention

· Cancer screening

· Health disparities

· Types of psychotherapy/counseling

· Exercise

· Smoking cessation

· Substance abuse

· Sexual health

· Contraception, particularly long-acting reversible contraception (LARC)

· Health promotion for postmenopausal women

· Management of unintended pregnancy

· Preconception care

· Interconception care and/or birth spacing

· Genetics

· Prevention of birth defects

· Environmental health

· Preventing teratogenic exposures during pregnancy

Other relevant topics are welcome. All types of articles will be considered, and descriptions of the article types can be found on the next page. The deadline for initial manuscript submission is August 1, 2012.

Please send your proposed topic, type of article, and contact information to JMWH Editor-in-Chief Frances E. Likis, CNM, NP, DrPH, FACNM, at flikis@acnm.org.

Health Educator, Health Services Researcher, Nurse, Nurse Researcher, Nurse-Midwife, Obstetrical Nurse
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of the Journal of Health & Productivity: Health and Productivity on the Workplace: the Relationship between Payer, Provider and Policy Maker in Oncology and Hematology
09/01/2012
Journal of Health & Productivity

Call for Papers for a Special Issue of the Journal of Health & Productivity: Health and Productivity on the Workplace: the Relationship between Payer, Provider and Policy Maker in Oncology and Hematology

The deadline for submission is September 1, 2012.

The Journal of Health & Productivity (JHP) published by InPress Media Group for the Institute for Health and Productivity (IHPM) publishes current research and debate on all aspects of employee health and productivity.

The Journal of Health & Productivity aims to be the leading multidisciplinary publication offering peer-reviewed high quality original research and review articles with real relevance to payers, providers, policy makers and employers. The Journal provides corporate decision makers critically examined evidence applicable to their own issues concerning employee health and its impact on productivity.

Led by Editor-in-Chief William B. Bunn III, MD, JD, MPH, vice president of Health, Safety, Security and Productivity at Navistar International, the Journal’s Editorial Advisory Board of leading academic researchers and industry experts ensures that the publication is a must-read for researchers and practitioners concerned with the health and productivity of the workforce.

Reaching more than 12,000 senior executives via print and more than 9,500 electronically, the Journal of Health & Productivity heavily penetrates the market it serves, including corporate employee coalitions, business associations, health plans, providers and government agencies.

The Journal of Health & Productivity (JHP) publishes:

Peer-reviewed research articles on all aspects of employee health and productivity;
Practical advice via in-depth case studies, presenting simple practical solutions to employee health and productivity problems
Real-life implications for the individual, the employer, and public health systems in general
Policies, processes, systems and governance issues related to cost-effective health and productivity programs for employers.

Call for papers: Oncology & Hematology Special
The Journal of Health & Productivity (JHP) is planning to advance Journal of Health & Productivity further by publishing a special peer-reviewed issue addressing the topics relevant to the employer/payer and provider relationship in oncology and hematology.

Based on ongoing response from its members, the IHPM recognizes that there is an unfilled need for authoritative, peer reviewed, information about health and productivity related to oncology and hematology.

The Journal of Health & Productivity is seeking original work to facilitate understanding of the often divergent perspectives of payers, providers, policy makers and employers, presenting relevant – must-read – information that will enhance decisions made by providers, payers, and policy makers.

The Journal of Health & Productivity will be addressing unique oncology and hematology topics relevant to executives concerned about the health and productivity of their employees.

The overall goal of the Journal is to improve employee healthcare in the oncology and hematology.

The editors of the Journal of Health & Productivityare seeking original research articles and informed commentary on the following topics:

Cancer in the workplace: prevalence and economic impact

Measuring the economic burden of cancer

The impact of cancer and hematological disorders on workplace health and productivity

The psychosocial impact of cancer and hematological disorders and the effect on employee productivity

Lost productive time associated with cancer and hematological disorders

Measuring outcomes and quality of care and the impact on employee productivity

Cost of new therapeutic agents and impact on patients, employees, providers and employers

Effects of innovative models of care, care delivery, and quality of care on employee health and productivity

Effects of healthcare reform on cancer care – and how this impacts employers and employees

Methodologies for accountability of payers and providers in oncology/hematology and the effect on employers and employees

Effect on employee health and productivity of health promotion and care delivery models in oncology/hematology

Improving functional health of employees with cancer and their impact on total labor costs

Impact of new economic models on oncology care – and the effect on employee productivity

Effects of healthcare reform on cancer care on employee health and productivity

Impact of plan design on patient access to appropriate therapies

The benefit of integrating evidence-based guidelines into practice on employee health and productivity

Innovative collaboration between payers, providers, policy-makers and the effect on workplace health and productivity

Advances in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer and the impact on employee health and productivity

Cancer survivorship, late treatment-related side effects (physical, psychosocial and cognitive abnormalities) and employee health and productivity

How to submit
Preference will be given to high quality original research and review articles. Contributors are encouraged to report on current research, clarifying the practical implications on employee health and productivity of their work in order to increase understanding and provide a platform for further research and development.

All submitted papers will undergo the standard peer-review process required by Journal of Health & Productivity. Due to space constraints, please limit the text to 4500 words and the graphic elements to a combined total of 6 tables and figures. Final decisions regarding inclusion in this special issue rest solely with the Editors.

Please send your manuscript to:

Peter Hofland, PhD
Publisher and Executive Editor Journal of Health & Productivity
InPress Media Group, LLC
4960 South Gilbert Road, Suite 1286
Chandler, AZ 85249
editor@inpressmediagroup.com

Health Economist, Health Services Researcher, Healthcare Administrator, Hematologist, Oncologist, Physician, Physician Researcher, Policy Analyst
Call for Papers for a Theme Issue of School Psychology Forum: Evaluations of School-Wide or Large Group Interventions
09/15/2012
School Psychology Forum

Call for Papers for a Theme Issue of School Psychology Forum: Evaluations of School-Wide or Large Group Interventions

SPF is an excellent forum for large-scale program evaluations. The goal is to publish quality examples of program evaluations. SPF would like to publish papers that use a variety of methods, analysis of systemic issues, or interesting methods of interventions. Examples include: obesity prevention, school-wide positive behavior supports, social skill programs in a Head Start program, and a host of prevention programs.

Deadline: September 15th, 2012

Behavioral Scientist, Health Educator, Psychologist, School Nurse
Call for Papers for a Special Focus of the American Heart Journal: Transradial Angiography and Intervention
06/30/2012
American Heart Journal

Call for Papers for a Special Focus of the American Heart Journal: Transradial Angiography and Intervention

In recognition of the increasing interest and adoption of transradial angiography and intervention, the American Heart Journal will publish a special section dedicated to transradial invasive procedures, in the September 2012 issue. Studies that will be considered for publication include observational analyses or randomized trials that examine technical issues, implementation, or outcomes. Manuscripts should be submitted by June 30, 2012.

To submit your manuscript and for Instructions to Authors, visit http://ees.elsevier.com/ahj/.

For further information, contact Guest Editor Sunil Rao, MD, at sunil.rao@dm.duke.edu.

Cardiologist, Physician Researcher
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Special Issue of Pimatisiwin: A Journal of Indigenous and Community Health: Prioritizing Indigenous Maternal and Infant Health
06/30/2012
Pimatisiwin: A Journal of Indigenous and Community Health

Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Special Issue of Pimatisiwin: A Journal of Indigenous and Community Health: Prioritizing Indigenous Maternal and Infant Health

Deadline for Submission is June 30th, 2012

Indigenous communities continually experience poorer health outcomes than the general populations of the countries they live in. Maternal and infant outcomes are a fundamental indicator of the health of populations, and the differences between Indigenous and non-Indigenous outcomes are marked. Indigenous communities also experience higher birth rates, younger populations, barriers to accessing health care, and higher rates of suicide, addiction, incarceration, family violence, and apprehension of children. The health and well-being of Indigenous mothers and their babies is central to understanding how these disparities are embodied, reproduced, challenged, and overcome.

Research in the area of maternal and infant health has the potential to play an important role in addressing disparities. Issues of health outcomes, access to health care and education, place of birth, provision and sustainability of midwifery services, breastfeeding, current maternal health policies and practices, and social determinants of health all contribute to our understanding of this issue. As attention to both maternal and infant health policy and the health and well-being of Indigenous communities is becoming more prevalent in wider national and global discourses, research and evidence regarding indigenous maternal and infant health becomes increasingly relevant.

This special issue (Winter 2012) seeks to bring together the various approaches to Indigenous maternal and infant health research and practice.

Special Editors:

The issue will be co-edited by Rachel Olson (Tr’ondek Hwech’in First Nation and the University of Sussex) and the National Aboriginal Council of Midwives (NACM). NACM is a Canadian national organization and exists to promote excellence in reproductive health care for Inuit, First Nations, and Métis women. We advocate for the restoration of midwifery education, the provision of midwifery services, and choice of birthplace for all Aboriginal communities consistent with the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

Articles must be submitted electronically by email in Microsoft Word Format to either the managing editor (patti-laboucane@ncsa.ca) or Rachel Olson (r.olson@sussex.ac.uk).

Academic, Health Services Researcher, Native American, Nurse Researcher, Nurse-Midwife, Policy Analyst, Public Health Expert, Public Health Worker, Public Servant, Social Scientist, Social Worker
Call for Papers for Two Special Issues of Palliative Medicine
10/01/2012
Palliative Medicine

Call for Papers for Two Special Issues of Palliative Medicine

Call for papers for two forthcoming special editions:

1. Family Carers in Palliative care
Guest edited by Prof Sheila Payne and Prof Gunn Grande

It is widely recognised that family, friends and significant others (hereafter called ‘family carers’) provide care to patients during advanced illness and through the process of dying. They have an essential role in providing physical care, emotional and social support, financial resources, advocacy and anticipatory care, and in negotiating and managing care during the final phases of life. The presence of family carers who are able and willing to provide care can facilitate patient choices, such as place of care and death at home. It is a challenging and demanding role which may have physical, psychological, social and financial consequences for carers which outlasts the period of care and may influence their bereavement. Family carers occupy an ambiguous position, being both providers and potentially recipients of care.

This proposed Special Edition will serve as a useful resource for everyone interested in improving support to family carers. It is written for researchers, clinicians, managers, educators and policy makers working in, or responsible for, palliative care and hospice services. The special edition will focus on care provided by adults to adults who are in the palliative phase of their condition. It will cover care provided in a range of settings including the home, hospital, care home (nursing home) for older people, hospice and other settings.

Such knowledge is essential for informing the construction, evaluation, and promotion of supportive interventions that promote well-being directly for family carers and indirectly for patients. Hence, the call for papers for this special issue invites theoretical and research-based manuscripts that address the cumulative and interactive effects of individual, family, community, organizations, services, and policy factors on family carers’ well-being. Thus we call for manuscripts that target research from health and social care perspectives with a primary focus on family carers within a context of palliative and end of life care.
Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

Promoting needs assessments of family carers with implications for targeting appropriate interventions
Identifying factors associated with adverse effects of care giving
Systematic reviews of the impact of carers interventions on outcomes
International or national comparisons of carers economic policies and their influence on health decision-making
Identifying the needs of specific groups of carers and their experiences

2. Understanding of palliative care in non-malignant disease
Guest edited by Prof Marie Fallon

In many countries specialist palliative care grew out of and has been closely associated with cancer care. This has led to challenges in providing palliative care for patients with non-malignant disease; knowledge, attitudes and skills have been strongly affected by this background. Modern palliative care in the cancer setting is more integrated than before and can move in and out of patient care, but this may not always be true for patients with other diagnoses.

This special edition will focus on developing our knowledge base regarding the palliative care of those with non-malignant disease. We particularly seek papers from those working outside specialist palliative care which add to our understanding of how palliative care can contribute to the care and meet the needs of those with non-malignant disease. Our aim is to publish rigorous empirical (original research or reviews), methodological or theoretical work to further our understanding of palliative care in non-malignant disease.

Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

Understanding what colleagues from non-palliative care specialties require from palliative care to meet the needs of different patient groups.

Learning from diverse health care settings and services across different counties about effective collaboration between palliative care and other specialties.

How to educate people to provide effective high quality palliative care to those with non-malignant disease.

The use of guidelines or national frameworks for providing end of life care to those with non-malignant disease.

The views of patients and carers on developments in non-malignant palliative care.

New methods of investigating these issues.

Before submission authors should carefully read the journal’s Author Guidelines http://www.uk.sagepub.com/journals/Journal201823?#tabview=manuscriptSubmission

Authors should submit an electronic copy of their complete manuscript through Manuscript Central: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/palliative-medicine. Submissions are encouraged by 1st October 2012. For further information please contact the Editorial Office: debbie.ashby@bristol.ac.uk

Guest Editors
Professor Sheila Payne
Director of the International Observatory on End of Life Care
Help the Hospices Chair in Hospice Studies
Lancaster University

Professor Gunn Grande
Professor of Palliative Care
School of Nursing, Midwifery & Social Work
University of Manchester

Professor Marie Fallon
St Columba’s Hospice Chair of Palliative Medicine
University of Edinburgh

Family Caregiver, Health Economist, Health Services Researcher, Home Health Nurse, Hospice Nurse, Nurse Researcher, Physician Researcher
Call for Manuscripts: Second Annual Special Issue of Nursing Economic$ on Staffing Based on Evidence
06/01/2012
Nursing Economic$

Call for Manuscripts: Second Annual Special Issue of Nursing Economic$ on Staffing Based on Evidence

Target Issue: September/October 2012

Forging the Future of Staffing Based on Evidence 2012

What Do We Know?

The challenges we face in healthcare staffing continue to present opportunities for nurses to lead change and innovation. At the center of this movement must be evidence--research and data from experiences that become the framework upon which we determine the strategies, policies and practices that will serve the profession now and in the future.

This is an invitation to nurse researchers and industry and operational thought leaders alike to contribute to the art and science of staffing based on evidence. It is the intention of this special issue that it serves as a valuable resource to individuals and organizations who are committed to staffing excellence as well as those who have not yet embraced evidence-based staffing in healthcare. By sharing knowledge, experiences, and wisdom, we will demonstrate the patient, workforce, and financial outcomes that can be achieved through evidence-based staffing practices.

Manuscripts are due by June 1st, 2012

Send submissions to Special Issue Editors:

Karlene Kerfoot karlene@indy.rr.com

Kathy Douglas Kathy.s.douglas@gmail.com

Nurse, Nurse Researcher
Call for Papers for Special Issue or Section of the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology: Advances in Data Analytic Methods for Evaluating Treatment Outcome and Mechanisms of Change
06/01/2012
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology

Call for Papers for Special Issue or Section of the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology: Advances in Data Analytic Methods for Evaluating Treatment Outcome and Mechanisms of Change

Important Dates

June 1, 2012: deadline to submit a 1-page proposal outlining the full manuscript
July 1, 2012: notification to authors of selected proposals
October 1, 2012: deadline to submit full manuscript

The Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (JCCP) plans to publish a special issue or section on "Advances in Data Analytic Methods for Evaluating Treatment Outcome and Mechanisms of Change" in 2013.

Over the past decade, there has been considerable advancement in the areas of data and statistical modeling to better test hypotheses about treatment trajectory, outcomes, moderation, mediation, and the appropriate handling of missing data.

The objective of this special issue is to facilitate the dissemination of these new technologies, thereby enhancing the quality of research as it relates to topics central to JCCP.

To this end, we are calling for original manuscript submissions within this broad framework, which include, but are not limited to, the following topics:

Applying sophisticated growth curve models to more accurately model change in outcomes over time;
Multivariate multilevel modeling;
Appropriate management of missing data;
Addressing non ignorable missingness;
Multilevel meta-analyses;
Examining predictors and moderators of treatment outcome;
Establishing causal inference

We intend to publish papers that introduce recent developments in data analysis and illustrate their utility for advancing knowledge about treatment efficacy and mechanisms of change, using clinically relevant examples.

Ideal manuscripts would preferably demonstrate the application of the technique(s) to an existing dataset or to simulated datasets (as in a Monte Carlo study), possibly with a comparison to other available and often employed techniques.

As such, the papers in this special issue/section can complement articles covering these topics published in other established outlets (e.g., Psychological Methods, Statistics in Medicine), which typically provide a more technical analysis of the statistical performance of various techniques and approaches.

The editors for this issue are David Rosenfield (Guest Editor), Scott N. Compton (JCCP Associate Editor), Stefan G. Hofmann (JCCP Associate Editor) and Jasper A. J. Smits (JCCP Incoming Associate Editor).

Authors interested in having a manuscript considered for this special issue/section need to first submit a 1-page proposal outlining the full manuscript by June 1, 2012. Authors of selected proposals will be notified by July 1, 2012 inviting them to submit a full paper due October 1, 2012.

All invited manuscripts will undergo the normal peer review process. Note that an initial invitation does not guarantee acceptance. All manuscripts should be prepared in strict accordance with JCCP guidelines (see the Instructions to Authors section of the JCCP homepage) and eventually submitted through the JCCP manuscript submission portal.

Questions about appropriate topics, as well as the 1-page proposals, can be sent to Dr. David Rosenfield.

Academic, Behavioral Scientist, Clinical Psychologist, Psychologist

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