Reviewer Guidelines
To improve the quality of journal publications, we cordially invite experts to be the reviewer of the JKMD journal. Your support and contribution would be valuable and constructive to our publication in ensuring the manuscripts published are of quality and high standard.
Qualifications:
- The potential reviewers must hold a Master's or Doctoral degree
- The research field must conform to public health
- Have good experience as a reviewer in a scientific journal
- Have published article(s) in internationally reputable journals and been cited
In reviewing the manuscript, the reviewer should pay attention to the following:
Title
Is the title clear and appropriate for the study's purpose?
Abstract
The abstract presents the objects, methods, and outcomes clearly and concisely.
Introduction
The introduction should briefly provide:
- The background of the study should indicate a research gap to be fulfilled/ addressed
- The hypothesis development (if using a quantitative method) should be based on a theoretical review and is expressed in a one-tailed direction (if it is possible).
- The literature review should provide the relevant theories to the research, and should guide and support understanding to answer the research question/s
- The objective of the study should be presented in a narrative with effective sentences.
- The originality of the work should be described
Method
- Sufficient information to provide recommendations or guidelines for further research is suggested to ease other researchers in replicating the research with the same result.
- The data analysis techniques employed should be elaborated.
- The method should thoroughly cover all procedures (Not only describing the definition of terms but also how to conduct the research).
- The study variables, the research subjects, and the research instruments (their names, item numbers, and reliability coefficients) should be identified.
- The terminology is appropriate for the field of public health.
Result and Discussion
This section describes the outcome of the study. Use tables and figures if needed. The data presented should be processed (not raw data) and be presented in the form of a table or figure with a supportive description. A table, chart, or figure should explain the analyses. The results should be able to answer the research question and/or hypotheses.
- The author describes the implications of the research.
- The author describes the results of the study and provides an analysis of how they are related to previous or current literature? The author should give substantial meaning to the results of the analysis and compare them with the findings of the relevant literature.
- The authors should address the strengths and limitations of their study. This section should not be a repetition of the results section.
Conclusion
- It presents the findings of the study as a synthesis of the results of the data analysis and the discussions; highlights new findings that contribute to the development of public health.
- The conclusion should be presented in effective sentences based on the results and discussions in the form of paragraphs (not in bullets or numbering);
- This section presents the main conclusions of the study.