Authorship, Acknowledgments and Conflict of Interest

The concept of authorship adopted by Texto & Contexto Enfermagem is guided by the substantial contribution of each of the individuals listed as an author, which concerns, above all, the design and planning of the research project, the obtaining or analysis and interpretation of the data, the writing and critical review. The number of authors is limited to eight. The possibility of including more authors in multicentric studies will be examined by considering the pertinence of the justifications presented.

The request to inclusion of new authors after the submission process has been initiated must be duly justified and agreed upon by all the authors.

 

Acknowledgments

The inclusion of the names of authors whose contribution is in disagreement with the above criteria is not justified and may, in this such case, they can be included in the Acknowledgments.

 

Copyright and Publication Authorization

Authors must assign the patrimonial copyrights of the article to Texto & Contexto Enfermagem by means of the Declaration of responsibility and transfer of copyright signed by all authors: according to model 3.

Manuscripts presented in events (congresses, symposia, seminars, among others) may be accepted, provided they have not been fully published in annals. Manuscripts previously published in foreign journals may be accepted, provided it is approved by the Executive Council Texto & Contexto Enfermagem and authorized by the periodical in which the manuscript was originally published in. This guideline is valid for complete articles, article excerpts and illustrations. It is the responsibility of the authors to request this authorization in writing. The manuscript submitted to Texto & Contexto Enfermagem for analysis must not have been submitted or published simultaneously in another journal.

 

Conflict of interest

Public trust in the peer review process and the credibility of published articles depend on how the conflict of interest is handled during writing, peer review, and editorial decision making. Conflicts of interest may be personal, commercial, political, academic or financial. Financial relationships such as employment, consultations, possession of shares, fees, testimony or expert opinion are more easily identifiable conflicts of interest and have a greater chance of undermining the credibility of the journal, authors and science itself. However, conflicts may occur for other reasons, such as personal relationships, academic competition, and intellectual passion.

Authors are responsible for acknowledging and disclosing conflicts of interest that may influence their work, and should report them. In individual statements during the manuscript submission process on ScholarOne system. The editors and reviewers should also acknowledge and disclose potential conflicts of interest that may influence their work during evaluation of a manuscript. In this case, a new editor or reviewer will be designated.