Journal of Respiratory Diseases

Journal of Respiratory Diseases

Journal of Respiratory Diseases – Instructions For Author

Open Access & Peer-Reviewed

Submit Manuscript

Instructions For Author

Comprehensive guidance for preparing and submitting respiratory medicine manuscripts.

Clear GuidanceStructured instructions for authors.
ReproducibilityData and code transparency.
Peer ReviewSingle blind evaluation.
Author SupportResponsive editorial assistance.

Journal at a Glance

ISSN: 2642-9241
DOI Prefix: 10.14302/issn.2642-9241
License: CC BY 4.0
Peer reviewed open access journal

Scope Alignment

Pulmonology, airway disease, respiratory infections, critical care, sleep medicine, and translational therapeutics. We prioritize validated clinical and mechanistic evidence.

Publishing Model

Open access, single blind peer review, and rapid publication after acceptance and production checks. Metadata validation and DOI registration are included.

Review Time09 daysFrom submission
Acceptance Rate52%Current average
Decision Time12 daysSubmission to decision
Publication3 daysAfter acceptance
Manuscript Types and Scope

JRD publishes original research, systematic reviews, clinical trials, methodological advances, and data resources that advance respiratory medicine and pulmonary science. Submissions should demonstrate rigorous methods, clear diagnostic criteria, and clinical or translational relevance.

Manuscript Structure
  • Title page with author names, affiliations, and corresponding author details
  • Structured abstract with objectives, methods, results, and conclusions
  • Introduction that defines the clinical context and research gap
  • Methods with study design, inclusion criteria, and protocol details
  • Results with validated outcomes, effect sizes, and confidence intervals
  • Discussion linking findings to clinical care or mechanistic insight
  • Conclusion highlighting key contributions and future directions
Formatting and Style
  • Use clear headings and consistent terminology
  • Define abbreviations and clinical codes at first use
  • Provide units and reference ranges for laboratory values
  • Include figure legends that describe sample sizes and data sources
  • Prepare tables in editable format with clear headings
  • Label supplementary files clearly and reference them in the text
Reporting Standards and Ethics
  • Provide institutional review board approvals and consent statements
  • Follow CONSORT for clinical trials and STROBE for observational studies
  • Use PRISMA for systematic reviews and ARRIVE for animal studies
  • Disclose conflicts of interest and funding sources
  • Describe limitations and generalizability
Data and Code Requirements

Authors should provide data availability statements and, when possible, deposit data in trusted repositories. Code or analysis pipelines should be shared or documented to support reproducibility.

  • Include accession numbers or repository links
  • Describe preprocessing and quality control steps
  • Document software versions and computational environments
  • State any access restrictions for sensitive data
Figures and Tables
  • Submit high resolution figures in standard formats
  • Label axes and include units for quantitative plots
  • Provide color blind friendly palettes when possible
  • Ensure tables are editable and include footnotes
References
  • Ensure references are complete and consistent
  • Include DOIs where available
  • Use standard citation formats
  • Confirm all in text citations appear in the reference list
Clinical Trial and Registry Requirements

Clinical trials should include registration identifiers and follow applicable regulatory requirements. Observational studies using registries should describe data governance and consent limitations.

  • Provide trial registration numbers when applicable
  • Describe primary and secondary endpoints
  • Report adverse events and safety monitoring
  • Include protocol deviations and amendments
Submission Process
1

Prepare Files

Ensure manuscript, figures, and supplementary files are complete.

2

Submit

Upload files via ManuscriptZone: https://oap.manuscriptzone.net.

3

Quick Form

Optional simple submission form: https://openaccesspub.org/manuscript-submission-form.

4

Peer Review

Single blind review by subject experts.

5

Decision

Receive editorial decision with reviewer feedback.

Peer Review and Timeline

JRD uses single blind peer review. Reviewers evaluate study rigor, data quality, and clarity of reporting. Initial decisions are typically issued within 12 days depending on reviewer availability.

StageTypical TimingFocus
Initial Screening2 to 3 daysScope fit and compliance checks
Peer Review09 daysMethodology validity and impact
Revision3 to 5 daysAuthor responses
Production3 daysCopyediting and DOI registration
After Acceptance

Accepted manuscripts move to production for copyediting, proof review, and DOI registration. Articles are published under CC BY 4.0 to support open access reuse with attribution.

Authors should review proofs promptly to confirm accuracy of figures, tables, and metadata.

APCs and Payment

APCs are applied after acceptance and cover peer review management, production, and archiving services. Partial waivers may be available for eligible authors. Contact the editorial office for guidance.

Submission Checklist
  • Scope alignment confirmed
  • Data availability statement included
  • Diagnostic criteria and staging documented
  • Cover letter prepared with scope summary
  • Ethics and consent statements included
  • Report diagnostic criteria for asthma, COPD, ILD, or other respiratory conditions studied.
  • Provide spirometry parameters (FEV1, FVC) with reference ranges and units.
  • Describe bronchodilator response criteria and testing protocols when applicable.
  • Include imaging modalities and acquisition parameters (X-ray, CT, HRCT, ultrasound).
  • Report oxygenation metrics such as SpO2, PaO2, or PaO2/FiO2 ratios.
  • Clarify exacerbation definitions and grading for respiratory disease severity.
  • Describe microbiology sampling methods and antimicrobial susceptibility reporting.
  • Detail medication exposure, dosing schedules, and adherence monitoring methods.
  • Explain inclusion and exclusion criteria, comorbidities, and smoking history.
  • Define adverse events, safety monitoring, and clinical endpoints clearly.
  • Describe handling of missing data, confounders, and subgroup analyses.
  • Provide data availability statements and access conditions for sensitive datasets.
  • Document ethics approvals, informed consent, and biospecimen governance.
  • Report pulmonary function tests, lung volumes, and diffusion capacity when relevant.
  • Include model validation metrics and calibration details for predictive studies.
  • State whether bronchoscopy or biopsy was used and provide rationale.
  • Describe antiviral, anti-inflammatory, or biologic therapies and timelines.
  • Provide baseline demographic tables with disease duration and comedications.
  • Include biomarkers such as CRP, eosinophils, or IgE where relevant.
  • Clarify ventilatory support settings and weaning protocols for ICU studies.
  • Report imaging reader blinding, inter-rater reliability, or adjudication procedures.
  • Describe quality control for laboratory assays and external proficiency testing.
  • Include definitions for remission, response, progression, or relapse outcomes.
  • Provide statistical power calculations or justification for sample size.
  • Report secondary endpoints and exploratory analyses separately.
  • Describe patient reported outcome measures and validation sources.
  • State regulatory or trial registration identifiers when applicable.
  • Provide statements on data sharing, reuse, and repository access.
  • Explain limitations and generalizability for clinical implementation.
  • Specify sample handling, storage temperatures, and processing timelines for biospecimens.
  • Report comorbidity indices and medication interactions that may affect outcomes.
  • Describe criteria for treatment response or nonresponse classifications.
  • Include protocol for laboratory assay repeatability and inter-lab variation.
  • Explain adjustments for confounders such as BMI, age, or smoking exposure.
  • Provide patient flow diagrams and attrition details for each study stage.
  • Include imaging scoring systems and threshold definitions used.
  • Report hospitalization, mortality, or readmission outcomes when applicable.
  • Clarify rationale for inclusion of control or comparator groups.
  • Describe patient monitoring intervals and follow up adherence strategies.
  • Explain criteria for noninvasive respiratory assessment and cutoff values.
  • Provide details on imaging contrast agents, timing, and safety monitoring.
  • Report surveillance intervals for high risk respiratory patients when relevant.
  • Describe nutritional assessment methods and frailty measures when applicable.
  • Include patient education or adherence interventions used in the study.
  • Clarify definitions for acute versus chronic respiratory presentations.
  • Describe criteria for hospitalization or readmission endpoints when measured.
  • Provide a structured abstract with clear objectives, methods, results, and conclusions.
  • Use consistent respiratory medicine terminology and define abbreviations at first use.
  • Include a data availability statement with repository links or accession numbers.
  • Report statistical tests, effect sizes, and confidence intervals where applicable.
  • Describe patient cohorts, inclusion criteria, and disease staging methods.
  • Provide clear figure legends and indicate sample sizes and data sources.
  • Confirm references include DOIs where available and match in text citations.
  • Disclose funding sources, grant numbers, and potential conflicts of interest.
  • Report ethical approvals and informed consent requirements.
  • Include a brief limitations statement that addresses generalizability.
  • State whether preprints exist and disclose prior dissemination.
  • Describe how raw data and code can be accessed, including access controls.
  • Provide trial registration identifiers when applicable.
  • Include laboratory reference ranges and clinical units for key measures.
  • Describe adverse event reporting and safety monitoring procedures.
  • Clarify primary and secondary endpoint definitions and timing.
Author Support

For questions about formatting or submission steps, contact [email protected].

JRD Commitment

JRD is committed to rigorous, transparent publishing in respiratory medicine and pulmonary science. We emphasize reproducible clinical methods, clear reporting of diagnostic criteria, and ethical compliance across all article types.

The editorial office supports authors, editors, and reviewers with clear guidance and responsive communication. For questions about scope or workflow, contact [email protected].

We encourage continuous improvement in reporting practices and share updates that help the community maintain high standards in respiratory and critical care research.

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