Swiss Surgery is the official organ of the Swiss society for Surgery (SGC) and the Swiss Society for Traumatology and Insurance Medicine (SGTV); collaboration with additional surgery-related societies is planned. Swiss Surgery publishes papers concerned with surgery and related fields. Each annual volume consists of six regular issues and appropriate supplements. Contributions in German, French, and English are accepted, and each paper includes summaries in the language in which it appears and in English. The summaries are divided into standard sections (see below). Only papers that have not previously appeared in or been submitted to other periodicals are published. Submitted manuscripts are subject to peer review.
The author expressly ensures that he or she possesses the lawful copyright to the article including all figures, graphs, drawings, and tables contained therein; and that the article does not infringe upon the rights of others.
The author assigns to the Publisher all rights to the article, including those above and beyond its publication in Swiss Surgery. These exclusive rights, unlimited in time, scope, and amount and extending to the statute of limitations for the respective copyright, encompass the copying and reproduction of the article, physically or virtually, as the Publisher sees fit. The author further assigns to the Publisher the following sole and exclusive rights:
Submission of papers: Three copies of the manuscript and a diskette should be submitted to the Editor-in-Chief at the address given below (for figures: one original and two good copies). The pages of the manuscript should be numbered in their proper order at the top right-hand corner, starting with the title page and containing the page number as well as the name of the first author.
Original papers should be a maximum of 8-10 A4 pages long (double spaced), including tables, figures and legends, and references. Upon acceptance of a paper by the editors, all rights and copyright will be transferred to the publisher.
The title page of each paper should include, in the following order: Name of the institute or clinic, including the name of the director(s) (if there is more than one author or institution, affiliations should be indicated using arabic numerals); title of the article; author name(s) (preceded by initials, but with no academic titles); and an address for correspondence.
The summaries in the language of the article and in English (the latter should be preceded by a translation of the title) should be a maximum of 250 words long, printed on a separate sheet, and should be divided into the following sections: Aims; Methods; Results; Discussion; Conclusions. They should summarize the significant content of the paper. Frequently used abbreviations should be written out upon being employed the first time in the summary, followed by the proper abbreviation (in parentheses). More infrequently appearing abbreviations should always be written out in the text.
A maximum of six key words (only in English) should be included after the summary.
The paper itself should be divided according to the internationally accepted conventions into the following sections: Introduction; Aims; Patients, Material and Methods; Results; Discussion; Conclusions. Subheadings may be used if necessary.
Reference citations in the text should have the following form: "Landau et al. [13] found that ..." or "A recent study by Smith & Watson carried out in 1993 [2] showed that ..." or "The differing results obtained in various studies [1, 2, 4] indicate ...".
Pharmaceuticals should be referred to solely by their generic and not their trade names.
Tables should be numbered using roman numerals. Each table should be printed on a separate sheet. Beneath the table number, a brief descriptive title should be given; this should then be fol lowed by the body of the table. It is recommended that each table also include a brief explanatory legend.
Figures (maximum of 8 per paper) should be numbered using arabic numerals. They must be submitted in a form suitable for reproduction (unscreened original photographs, glossy black-and-white prints, original drawings, laser printouts of graphs, slides). Each figure must be accompanied by a legend. The legends should be printed on a separate sheet. Figures will normally be reproduced in black and white. It is possible to reproduce color illustrations, but the authors will be invoiced the extra cost involved.
The reference list should contain only references that are cited in the text. The references should be numbered in the order of their appearance in the text. Examples are as follows:
Proofs: Two copies of page proofs will be sent to the corresponding author. Changes of content or stylistic changes may only be made in exceptional cases in the page proofs. Corrections that exceed 5% of the typesetting cost will be invoiced to the authors.
Complimentary copies: The publisher will provide each author of an article with two complimentary copies of the issue in which the article appeared.
Offprints can be ordered at cost price, provided that the order is sent in at the same time as the proofs are returned.
Editor-in-Chief:
Prof. Dr. med. Adrian Leutenegger
Co-Chefarzt Chirurgische Klinik
Kantonsspital
CH-7000 Chur
Tel. +41 81 256 61 11
Fax +41 81 353 34 80
E-Mail: adrian.leutenegger@ksc.chur.ch
Verlag Hans Huber, Bern