Tag Archives: Scientific writing

What Does a Manuscript Rejection Really Mean? (Probably Not What You Think)

by Justin B. Moore, PhD, MS, FACSM As I’ve mentioned previously, science is a failure business. Whether it’s a manuscript, a job search, or a grant application, the odds are that you’ll experience one or more rejections on the way to success. But what does rejection mean in this context? Does it mean you’re a bad writer, a bad candidate,

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On-Demand Training: Introduction to Practice-Based Publishing

Practice-based research is at the core of the Journal of Public Health Management and Practice (JPHMP) mission. Practitioners are doing good and important work, inside and outside COVID-19 response, and are doing work that the broader community might benefit from learning more about. State and local public health practitioners are a primary readership of the journal and, increasingly, are also

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JPHMP Editors Deliver Webinar on Scientific Writing for the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE)

January 1, 2017 — Editors Justin B. Moore, PhD, MS, and Lloyd F. Novick, MD, MPH, of the Journal of Public Health Management and Practice have written a comprehensive toolkit to assist applied epidemiologists in writing scientific articles about their research. In partnership with the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE), Moore and Novick, along with Theresa M. Oniffrey, MPH, EMT-P, of Cerus

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