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Instruction for Authors
Authors must submit articles online only. Use Microsoft Word for Windows with font TH SarabunPSK, size 16 points, and inserting page numbers on the lower right. However, this journal is printed in Thai for the entire article but contains only the English abstract. In order for the article to be published correctly, the author must prepare the original article as follows:
2.1 Author: Full name and name title do not need to indicate the title. The first name must be listed as the main author, followed by the name of the secondary author until complete, and put a superscript number at the end of the author's name to show affiliation.
2.2 Affiliation: The organisational affiliation of each author has to be listed in numerical order by showing the names of secondary agencies and main agencies, followed by province and country.
2.3 Contact Address: Show the name of the main contact or coordinator. Followed by the department, road, district, province, postal code, email, country, and postal code.
3.1 Abstracts in English and Thai have to be corrected. It is an abbreviation for only the essential points. The length of each language should not exceed 500 words, including the background, objectives, methods, results that show only the main information and statistics, summary, and 3–5 keywords.
3.2 Background: It presents the problems, reasons, or origin of the research. There should be secondary data that points out the problems. The situation may be brought up as a basis for reasoning and brought into the study to solve problems or answer questions.
3.3 Objectives: Specify in paragraphs.
3.4 Methods: Research methods, population and sample, tools, study procedures (if necessary), data collection, data analysis, and definitions (if any).
3.5 Results: It explains what was obtained from the research by presenting evidence and information in an orderly, uncomplicated manner, described in prose. There is an order in which the study results are presented according to the set objectives in easy-to-understand language. If there are many numbers and variables, tables or figures should be used to explain the meaning of the findings or analyse important information that needs to be presented. The results may be discussed together, provided the table name is placed on the table. and the name of the picture must be under the picture. However, the total number of tables and pictures should not exceed five.
3.6 Discussion: It is a discussion of the findings and how they should be compared with the work of others. You should use five writing principles:
anyone who has done research and found it in the same way or if
it conflicts with anyone.
It is to encourage readers to decide on the validity of the research results and their limitations, which will lead to recommendations for further research and the application of the research results.
3.7 Conclusion: Highlight key findings from this study that relate to the objectives.
3.8 Suggestion: It is written to provide information, advice, guidelines, or any other method to those involved for use.
3.9 Acknowledgements (if any)
4.1 Introduction: It is the part that entices readers to be interested, informs them of the origin and purpose of your writing, and lays the conceptual framework for readers to understand the content of the article that will be presented.
4.2 Content: It presents content information that is easy to understand and quick. The presentation of the story may be divided into points, subtopics, or sequences of events, as appropriate. The article may be analysed and criticised with reliable references.
4.4 Conclusion: It is a brief summary of the main points of the article at the end of the chapter. It may indicate the results, how important they are, what they can be used for?, what will happen next?, or set questions or concluding points to encourage readers to seek knowledge or invent and develop the matter further.
Printed journal article
Kane RA, Kane RL. Effect of genetic testing for risk of Alzheimer's disease. N Engl J Med 2009;361:298-9.
Electronic journal article
Annas GJ. Resurrection of a stem-cell funding barrier-Dickey-Wicker in court. N Engl J Med [Internet]. 2010 [cited 2011 Jun 15]; 363:1687-9. Available from: http://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJMp1010466
Electronic journal article with doi
Gudlavalleti SK, Crawford EN, Harder JD, Reddy JR. Quantification of each serogroup polysaccharide of Neisseria meningitidis in A/C/Y/W-135-DT conjugate vaccine by high-performance anion-exchange chromatography-pulsed amperometric detection analysis. Anal Chem [internet]. 2014 Jun [cited 2024 Mar 15];86(11): 5383-90. Available from: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24810004/ doi: 10.1021/ac5003933
Printed book
Janeway CA, Travers P, Walport M, Shlomchik, M. Immunobiology. 5th ed. New York: Garland; 2001.
Electronic book
Foley KM, Improving palliative care for cancer [Internet]. Washington: National Academy Press; 2001 [cited 2002 Jul 9]. Available from: http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10149/ improving -palliative-care-for-cancer
Conference Papers
Christensen S, Oppacher F. An analysis of Koza’s computational effort statistic for enetic programming. In: Genetic programming. EuroGP 2002:Proceedings of the 5th European Conference on Genetic Programming; 2002 Apr 3-5; Kinsdale, Ireland. Berlin: Springer; 2002. p. 182-91.
Newspaper
Gaul G. When geography influences treatment options. Washington Post (Maryland Ed). 2005 Jul 24;Sect. A:12 (col.1).
Government Report
Page E, Harney JM. Hazard evaluation report. Cincinnati (OH): National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (US); 2001 Feb. 24 p. Report No.: HETA2000-0139-2824.
Website
Ranchon F, Salles G, Späth HM, Schwiertz V, Vantard N, Parat S, et al. Chemotherapeutic errors in hospitalised cancer patients: attributable damage and extra costs [Internet]. 2011 [cited 2016 Aug 9]. Available from: https://bmccancer.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1471-2407-11-478
The research, academic articles, and opinions presented in any article are solely the views of the authors. They do not reflect the opinions or responsibilities of the editorial team or the Thai Food and Drug Administration. Typographical errors are excluded. Articles published in the Thai Food and Drug Journal are copyrighted by the journal.
The names and email addresses entered in this journal site will be used exclusively for the stated purposes of this journal and will not be made available for any other purpose or to any other party.