Guidelines for Reviewers

Guidelines for Reviewers

1. Peer Review and Editorial Procedure

Peer review is an indispensable part of the publication process, ensuring that the journal maintains the highest quality standards for its published papers. All manuscripts submitted to this journal undergo rigorous peer review by experts.

Upon submission, the journal's Managing Editor conducts a technical pre-check of the manuscript. A suitable academic editor is then notified and invited to perform an editorial pre-check and recommend reviewers. The academic editor may decide to proceed with peer review, reject the manuscript, or request revisions prior to peer review. If peer review is initiated, the Editorial Office organizes the review process, engaging independent experts to provide at least two review reports per manuscript. Authors are required to make sufficient revisions (with a second round of peer review if necessary) before a final decision is made. The final decision rests with an academic editor (typically the Editor-in-Chief, an Editorial Board Member, or a Guest Editor for Special Issues). Accepted manuscripts undergo internal copyediting and English language polishing. For more details on the editorial process, please visit here (https://ccspub.org/jsrh/EP).

2. Reviewer Qualifications and Responsibilities

The role of the reviewer is critical in safeguarding the integrity of scholarly records. Reviewers are expected to evaluate manuscripts in a timely, transparent, and ethical manner, adhering to COPE guidelines (https://publicationethics.org/files/cope-ethical-guidelines-peer-reviewers-v2_0.pdf).

Reviewers must meet the following criteria:

Reviewers who accept an invitation are expected to:

3. Reviewer Benefits

Reviewers will receive remuneration (subject to funding availability) and enjoy priority access to academic events organized by CCSpub.

4. General Guidelines for Reviewers

4.1 Review Invitation

Manuscripts submitted to the journal are reviewed by at least two experts recommended by the academic editor during the initial screening. Reviewers are tasked with evaluating the manuscript's quality and advising the Editorial Office on whether to accept, request revisions, or reject the submission.

Invited reviewers are requested to:

4.2 Potential Conflicts of Interest

Reviewers must declare any potential conflicts of interest and contact the Editorial Office if uncertain whether a situation constitutes a conflict. Possible conflicts include (but are not limited to):

Reviewers must disclose any perceived biases for or against the manuscript or its authors.
Note: Reviewing a manuscript previously assessed for another journal is not considered a conflict of interest. In such cases, reviewers may inform the Editorial Office whether the manuscript has improved compared to the prior version. Reviewers are encouraged to consult COPE’s Ethical Guidelines for Peer Reviewers.

4.3 Confidentiality Agreement

The journal employs a double-blind peer review system. Until publication, reviewers must keep all manuscript content (including abstracts) confidential. Reviewers must avoid revealing their identity in comments or document metadata (e.g., in Word or PDF files). If a reviewer delegates the task to a colleague, the Editorial Office must be notified (the substitute must meet the criteria in Section 2).

Authors may opt to publish review reports alongside their paper (Open Peer Review), but only with the reviewer’s explicit permission. Otherwise, reports remain confidential unless disclosure is approved by the reviewer.

4.4 Review Reports

Review reports must be submitted in Chinese or English. Below are general guidelines:

Instructions for Reviewers:

Note: CCSpub adheres to multiple publishing standards. Reviewers familiar with these guidelines should report any concerns about their implementation.

Structure of Review Reports:

  1. Brief Summary: A short paragraph outlining the paper’s objectives, key contributions, and strengths.
  2. General Comments:
    • Research Articles: Highlight weaknesses, methodological inaccuracies, missing controls, etc.
    • Review Articles: Assess topic coverage, relevance, reference appropriateness, etc.
  3. Specific Comments: Cite line numbers, tables, or figures to pinpoint inaccuracies or unclear text. Focus on scientific content (language/formatting issues will be handled separately).

Guiding Questions for Research Articles:

Guiding Questions for Review Articles:

4.5 Manuscript Rating

Reviewers must complete the evaluation form and rate the manuscript.

4.6 Final Recommendation

Provide one of the following recommendations (visible only to editors):

All decisions must be thoroughly justified.