Scientific communication & publishing

Scientific publishing

With our clients’ best interest in mind, we write state-of-the-art original articles or meta-analyses, complying with current reporting standards and best practice guidelines, in the fields of clinical research, epidemiology, diagnostic accuracy assessment, public health… We handle your manuscript submission operations, including replies to editors/reviewers comments, revisions and resubmission.

Our writers also prepare special journal issues, based on scientific meetings or symposia, including proof-reading, formatting and rewriting.

Scientific communication

We design and prepare all materials for written or oral communications in scientific meetings (abstracts, posters, slides, talks).

Please see also

Together, ClinSearch writers have co-authored more than two hundreds peer-reviewed scientific papers and an equivalent number of scientific communications or other works.

Please see The complete list of scientific works by ClinSearch authors. [pdf]

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Applications

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News

Morning Read: Non-profit designing free Wi-Fi architecture for hospitals >> Read

Managing retinal vein occlusion >> Read

Let Me Die on the Prairie by Frances Jane Crosby Van Alstyne >> Read

Publication: Volume 16, number 4 (Stevenson). Study found that no conclusive results can be provided on the cost-effectiveness of four non-invasive tests for liver fibrosis [the Enhanced Liver Fibrosis Test, FibroTest and FibroMAX and transient elastography (FibroScan)] in patients suspected of having alcohol-related liver disease. >> Read

Top headlines from HIMSS2012 (Tuesday edition) >> Read

Incidence of diabetic retinopathy in people with type 2 diabetes mellitus attending the Diabetic Retinopathy Screening Service for Wales: retrospective analysis >> Read

Publication: Volume 16, number 3 (Hockenhull). Report finds that whilst some interventions targeted at mental health populations to reduce violence are well supported by the evidence a scattergun approach in the research literature provides little firm evidence for the majority of interventions. Evidence shows small-to-moderate effects for cognitive behavioural therapy for psychological interventions, and larger effects for atypical antipsychotic drugs. >> Read

How the NHS measures up to other health systems >> Read

Publication: Volume 16, number 5 (Ara). Although orlistat, sibutramine and rimonabant are all effective at reducing weight and body mass index and, compared with placebo, are all cost-effective, both sibutramine and rimonabant have been withdrawn because of safety concerns relating to potential treatment-induced fatal adverse events. >> Read

Peter John Fenton >> Read

Publication: Volume 16, number 6 (Reeves). The verteporfin photodynamic therapy cohort study found that treatment and follow-up were much less frequent in routine clinical practice than in research trials and the cost-effectiveness was similar to the highest previous estimate. >> Read

Frederick Valentine Flynn >> Read