About the Journal

Focus and Scope

Revista Bioética does not charge for the submission, editing or publication of manuscripts. Only in online version will be accepted manuscripts that are unpublished and/or previously made available on preprint servers recognized by SciELO. Manuscripts of a conceptual, documentary nature, resulting from research or experiences in the field of bioethics or medical ethics, and critical reviews related to these themes will be accepted. All manuscripts will be subjected to scrutiny by the editors, the Editorial Board and ad hoc reviewers following open science practices, promoting informed peer review.

The Bioethics Magazine is distributed free of charge to federal councils of health specialties, regional medical councils, medical associations, public libraries, bioethics courses and interested doctors, who register their registration in our database. It is also available electronically on the CFM page, the Virtual Health Library and SciELO.

Only in online version will be accepted unpublished manuscripts or those previously made available on preprint servers recognized by SciELO. Manuscripts of a conceptual, documentary nature, resulting from research or experiences in the field of bioethics or medical ethics, and critical reviews related to these themes will be accepted. All manuscripts will be subjected to scrutiny by the editors, the Editorial Board and ad hoc reviewers following open science practices, promoting informed peer review.

Peer Review Process

  • Initial phase: the manuscript is checked for text and abstract size, as well as formatted and checked for originality in the iThenticate: Plagiarism Detection Software program. At this stage, references are also checked, ensuring they are complete, correctly numbered and presented in Vancouver style. Suitability for the editorial line, spelling and grammatical aspects are also observed, and the keywords in the Health Sciences Descriptors (DeCS) database are checked. When necessary, the manuscript will be returned to the authors for adjustments; If the quantity or characteristics of the identified changes are considered significant, the manuscript may be rejected with guidance on possible resubmission, subject to compliance with the indicated specifications. If it is not necessary to make any changes at this stage, upon receipt of the corrected version by the authors, the next phase of the editorial process begins;
  • Assessment: the criteria for selecting reviewers seeks to encompass the widest possible analytical diversity, in line with the interdisciplinarity of the field of bioethics. Each article is sent to an evaluator with training in the specific area of ​​work (health and biology specialties, law, philosophy, social sciences, etc.), to another who studies or has already discussed the topic (health inequities, human rights, abortion, dysthanasia, genetics, research ethics, etc.) and also to a bioethicist with lato or stricto sensu training in bioethics to evaluate the use of ethical concepts and categories. The work will be forwarded to a first group of reviewers – members of the Editorial Board and ad hoc evaluators – If those initially designated cannot carry out this voluntary task within the stipulated period, other evaluators will be selected from among the registered collaborators and the process of requesting an opinion will be restarted. The criteria considered in the evaluations are content, alignment with the editorial line, originality of the ideas presented, timeliness, clarity of the text, adequacy of the language, relevance of the information, coherence and conceptual and methodological logic, as well as the title, summary, indication and the name of the parts of the manuscript, the indication of the objectives, the method, the presentation of results, the discussion and the final considerations. References are also checked, considering their adequacy and updating;
  • Publication: the peer-approved version will be copy-edited (spelling and grammar review) and submitted to the authors for approval. However, the final review of the article designed in the three languages, as well as the graphic proofs, will not be sent to the authors, as well as the translation of the articles into English and Spanish, which will only be published online on the magazine's website and in indexing databases.
At any stage, the editors reserve the right to make normative, spelling and grammatical changes to the texts, with a view to maintaining the cultured standard of the language and better understanding of the articles, whilst respecting the authors' style. If the authors decide not to publish the manuscript, after the initial edition, the version edited by Revista Bioética will belong to the magazine and cannot be sent to another journal.
 

Publication Frequency

In 2023, Revista Bioética will adopt the continuous publication modality.

Open Access Policy

This journal offers immediate, open access to its content, following the principle that making scientific knowledge freely available to the public provides greater global democratization of knowledge.

Statement on ethics and poor publishing practices

 

Revista Bioética is committed to ethical behavior at all stages of the editorial process and thus relies on the Committee on Publication Ethics (Cope) Code of Conduct and Best Practice Guidelines for Journal Editors, available at https://publicationethics.org/files/Code_of_conduct_for_journal_editors_Mar11.pdf, and in this statement, which provides in detail the expected standards of ethical behavior of all parties involved in the publication process – authors, editors of the Journal and reviewers.

Any author who wishes to publish their work in the Revista Bioética must above all agree with the guidelines present in this statement and also in the Editorial Policies of the journal. All these procedures seek to ensure the quality of the works published in our journal, with respect to the readers and authors of the articles.

Responsibilities of authors

a) Regarding the reporting of policies and procedures: all the information and guidelines for authors are available at  https://portal.cfm.org.br/images/stories/revistabioetica/normaseditoriais.pdf. Unpublished manuscripts of a conceptual, documentary nature, resulting from research or experiences in the field of bioethics or medical ethics, and critical reviews related to these topics will be accepted;

b) Regarding the accuracy of the manuscript data and information: an article must contain sufficient details and references to allow others to replicate the work or verify the data and information surveyed. Fraudulent or intentionally inaccurate statements constitute unethical behavior and are unacceptable;

c) Regarding originality and plagiarism:

  • Unpublished manuscripts in Portuguese, Spanish or English will be accepted. Works published in institutional repository are not considered unpublished.
  • Manuscripts in which the use of the “Track changes” tool is identified can be withdrawn after submission.
  • Works cannot have been concomitantly submitted to other journals.
  • The opinions and concepts expressed in the articles, the origin and accuracy of the citations are the responsibility of the authors.
  • Manuscripts that reproduce in whole or in part, without proper reference, works of other authors as well as an article, or a substantial part of it, already published by the authors themselves will be summarily refused.

d) Regarding multiple, redundant or concomitant publication: authors shall not publish manuscripts describing essentially the same research in more than one journal or primary publication. Additionally, submitting the same manuscript to more than one journal simultaneously constitutes unethical behavior and is unacceptable.

e) Regarding the recognition of references:

  • All references must be listed at the end of the article in the corresponding numerical order.
  • All citations from sources present in the text must be listed on the references, including documents, treaties, reports, books and book chapters.
  • All electronic references used must also inform the link and the date of access.
  • Literal references, which reproduce ipsis litteris a text already published, must inform in the references the page number in the original from which the excerpt was withdrawn.
  • One should always seek the original reference that one wants to emphasize and avoid second-order reference, that is, when the cited author is being referred by another.  If apud is unavoidable, this must be made explicit in the text.  For example: “Analyzing Potter’s work, Pessini 3 describes…”.
  • All references must be listed correctly and completely, according to the examples below.  Book titles, location, and publisher names must not be abbreviated.
  • The veracity of the information contained in the list of references is the responsibility of the authors.

f) Authorship of the article should be limited to those who contributed significantly to the conception, design, execution or interpretation of the reported study. All those who contributed significantly should be listed as co-authors. If others participated in certain substantive aspects of the research project, they should be credited or listed only as contributors. The corresponding author must ensure that all appropriate co-authors are included in the article, and that inappropriate co-authors are not included; they must also ensure that all co-authors have read and approved the final version of the paper and have agreed to its submission for publication. The email addresses of all co-authors must be provided at submission. Once the manuscript is accepted by the Editorial board, Revista Bioética will send a copy of this statement to all co-authors, for which we expect individual statements of agreement as a requirement for starting the evaluation process. After this stage, all communication will be conducted  only with the corresponding author;

g) Regarding the declaration of conflict of interest: all authors must declare in the manuscript any financial, professional or of any other substantive nature conflict of interest that may be considered an influencing factor in the results of the research or its interpretation. Authors should also disclose all sources of financial support;

h) Regarding fundamental errors in published works: if an author discovers a significant error or inaccuracy in their own published work, they must immediately notify the Editorial Team of the journal and cooperate with them to retract or correct the article.

 

Responsibilities of reviewers

a) Regarding the contribution to editorial decisions: peer review assists editors in making editorial decisions. The criterion for selecting reviewers seeks to contemplate the widest possible analytical diversity, in line with the interdisciplinarity of bioethics. Each article is sent to a reviewer with training in the specific area of the manuscript (specialties in health and biology, law, philosophy, social sciences, etc.), or a reviewer who studies or has already discussed the topic (health inequities, human rights, abortion, dysthanasia, genetics, research ethics, etc.) and also to a bioethicists with broad or stricto sensu bioethics training to evaluate the use of ethical concepts and categories Further revision or reformulation of parts of the article, title or references as presented in the recommendation may be required for final approval;

b) Regarding punctuality: any invited reviewer who feels unqualified to evaluate the research presented in a manuscript or who knows that its immediate review will be impossible should immediately notify the editors and withdraw from the review process;

c) Regarding confidentiality: all manuscripts will be submitted to the scrutiny of the editors, the editorial board and ad hoc reviewers in a double-blind system;

d) Regarding objectivity standards: reviews and opinions should be conducted and drafted objectively. Personal criticism of the authors is inadequate. Evaluators should express their opinions clearly, using arguments that support their assessment;

e) Regarding font recognition: all works presented are checked for originality in the iThenticate: Plagiarism Detection Software program. The results indicated by the program are carefully analyzed to identify whether the indications refer to improper citations or copies. If reviewers, at the time of evaluation, identify relevant published work that has not been cited by the authors, they must draw the editors' attention to any substantial similarity or overlap between the manuscript in question and any other published work of which they have personal knowledge;

f) Regarding disclosure and conflict of interest: privileged information or ideas obtained by reading the manuscripts should be kept confidential and must not be used for the reviewers' personal benefit. Reviewers should not evaluate manuscripts with which they have conflicts of interest resulting from competition, collaboration or other relationships or links with any of the authors, companies or institutions tied to the manuscripts.

 

About the responsibilities of editors 

  • The editors are responsible for the content published in Revista Bioética.
  • The Editorial team will strive to meet the needs of readers and authors.
  • All appropriate measures will be taken in the editorial processes to ensure the quality of the published material.
  • The editors of Revista Bioética champion freedom of expression, but manuscripts that contradict the fundamental principles of the Brazilian Constitution and, in particular, its articles 1º, 3º and 4º, which guarantee human rights and repudiation of racism, as well as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights will be rejected.
  • Editors will maintain the integrity of the academic record.
  • Will preclude business needs from compromising the intellectual and ethical standards of the journal.
  • Will publish corrections, clarifications, retractions and apologies when needed.
  • Will provide information about who has funded research or other academic work.
  • Will promote fair, impartial and timely peer review.
  • Will encourage the accuracy, integrity and clarity of research reports.
  • Will require objective and impartial evaluation from the Editorial Board.
  • Will comply with the confidentiality laws in their own jurisdiction.
  • Will obtain informed written consent for publications involving people who may be recognized or identified for participating in the surveys.
  • Will adopt systems for detecting plagiarism.
  • Will support authors whose copyrights have been breached or who have been the victims of plagiarism.

Informed consent

Research participants have the right to privacy, which must not be infringed without informed consent.Patient identification, including name, initials or hospital numbers, should not be published in text, photographs and pedigrees unless the information is essential for scientific purposes and the patient (or parent or guardian) gives written informed consent to Publication.Informed consent for this purpose requires that the identifiable patient view the manuscript before it is submitted.Authors should identify the people who provided writing assistance and disclose the source of funding for that assistance. Identifications must be provided if essential.Complete anonymity can be difficult;however, informed consent must be obtained if there is any doubt.For example, masking the eye region in patient photographs is inadequate protection of anonymity.If identifying characteristics are changed to protect anonymity, as in genetic pedigrees, authors must ensure that the changes do not distort scientific significance and editors must note this. The published article must state when informed consent was obtained.

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