Medical Sciences
EDITORIAL
Covering Recent Advances in Technology and Engineering StudiesAhmad Saddam
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Articles
PRODUCTION OF SYNTHESIS GAS BY UTILIZATION OF MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE VIA DRY REFORMING OF METHANE Volume 1, Issue 1, June 2015 Pages 1-8, Article Views: 32
AbstractGlobal warming issue generated by greenhouse gases (GHG, majorly CH4 and CO2) from various sources (fossil fuel burning, landfill, and power generation) has urged researchers to search for sustainable solutions to attenuate or suppress these emissions. Dry reforming of methane process utilizes these two major greenhouse gases, however, the process hampered by carbon deposition. This study focuses on the preparation of Ni nanoparticle and support Ni/MgO catalysts by microemulsion assisted synthesis. The study of different synthesis parameters depicted that higher surface area and smaller Ni nanoparticles will be obtained at lower water content due to their small microemuslion droplet size. The addition of MgO support to the microemulsion system leads to the drastic reduction in particles size and provides protective shell as depicted by TEM analysis. XRD analysis for pure NiO, MgO and NiO/MgO reveals the formation of a mild type of NiO-MgO solid solution formation. H2-TPR results indicate the lower reduction of NiO/MgO catalysts due to the lower free NiO available compared to pure NiO catalysts. Higher catalytic activity of supported catalysts was dedicated to its higher surface, smaller particle size and a strong metal-support interaction compared to Ni nanoparticles. ReferenceAlford, S. 2009. Best practices for youth friendly clinical services, Advocates for Youth. URL: https://goo.gl/iwfX7k. Baloyi, G. O. 2006. The evaluation of the national adolescent friendly clinic initiative (NAFCI) program in the Greater Tzaneen Sub-District. Master thesis, South Africa. University of South Africa, Pretoria: ZA. To Cite this article:Naido, P. 2015. Evaluation of clinics on the provision of youth friendly services in the Ethekwini Metro of Kwazulu Natal. International Journal of Health and Medical Sciences, 1: 1-7. |
Managed Care: What Do Private Practitioners (GPS) Think? Volume 1, Issue 1, June 2015 Pages 9-14, Article Views: 47
AbstractGenerally, managed care embedded their roles in most of general practitioners setting where most portion of the population seek their primary medical treatment. The aim of this study is to determine the perception of Private General Practitioners (GPs) towards managed care and factors influencing those perceptions. This study participated by 157 GPs work within the vicinity of Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya. The result of the study shows the age factor has an influence to perception score. This difference was significant proven when the young GPs have higher perception score than their counterparts. This study found no differences in any of GP’ criteria factors and perception scores. Quality of care was spotted having a positive, fair correlation with perception score and this relationship is statistically significant. Extended analysis of multivariate indicated race, GPs’ years of practice, GPs clinic duration and quality of care as predictors succumb to 20% variance in perception score. Overall, the majority of 102 GPs reported a negative, low perception towards managed care arrangement which is the consistent with findings of previous studies. Managed care is yet to be seen, its major effect in the local healthcare industry, though, the trend has been already transparent and this might due to the exposure from the external influence. Therefore, potential agencies, policy maker, as well as GPs need to hop in actively to start a measurement and collaboration for better healthcare delivery and promote healthy communication. Reference
Barker III, C. M. 1996. Maximizing efficiency in the management of the physician practice: Survival under managed care. Journal of Health Care Finance, 22:4 22-28. To Cite this article:Ibrahim, S., Manaf, M. R. A., Aizuddin A. N. 2015. Managed care: What do Private General Practitioners (GPS) think? International Journal of Health and Medical Sciences, 1: 8-16 |
Fraud Prevention in Implementation in National Health Insurance Kendari City, Indonesia
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Analysis on National Health Insurance Financing at Jeneponto Regency, Indonesia
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International Journal For Health and Medical Sciences
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International Journal of Technology and Engineering Studies (IJTES)
International Journal of Technology and Engineering Studies (IJTES) is published by KKG Publishing. IJTES is a double-blind peer-reviewed journal that is committed to advancing the field of engineering and technology. Contributions from various fields of engineering and technology area published in this journal. In contrast to other journals in engineering and technology, the IJTES is unique in a sense that the journal highly encourages interdisciplinary studies. From all the fields of applied and physical sciences original submissions are invited by IJTES.
International Journal of Technology and Engineering Studies (IJTES)
Guidelines for Authors
Authors are required to prepare manuscripts in accordance with the Journal’s style guides for authors that appear below. If authors do not follow the guidelines then their manuscript will be sent to them for revision prior to submission to the full review process.
Guidelines
- Use 12 size font of Time New Romans
- Page setting should be 81/2X11
- Document should be double space
- Page number in the upper- right corner
- One inch margins should be left from top and side
- All paragraphs should be left aligned
- All manuscripts must be submitted in Microsoft Word
Publication of Accepted Articles
Accepted papers are copy-edited. Authors review edits in page proofs. IJTES’s copy editor–production manager will contact you after the acceptance of your manuscript for publication.
Front Pages
Address: Title page should be added (this is not included with submissions under review) only for final versions of accepted manuscripts. Author’s names, affiliation, your work and complete addresses must be mention in your manuscripts. Example:
USING GPRS IN AMBULANCES
AUTHOR’S FULL NAME
Current University
School and/or Department
Building and/or Street
City, State, Zip Code
Tel: (000) 000-0000
Fax: (000) 000-0000
E-mail: scholar@univ.edu
Acknowledgment
Add a note at the bottom of front page, if you wish to acknowledge financial support, any other assistance, or the constructive feedback provided by the reviewers or the editor.
Abstract.
An abstract of 100-200 words and the title of the work go on page 2.
Headings and Sections
IJTES uses only three levels of headings. Use bold- face for all three. Main headings (all capital letters; centered) are first. Second-level headings (title-style letters; flush left) are next. Third-level headings (first letter of first word capitalized; indented; italicized; and run into paragraph) are next. Don’t skip steps: no second-level headings before you use a first-level heading, for instance. Use second- and third-level headings in sets of two or more.
Examples:
METHODS [1st level]
Data and Sample [2nd level]
Measures [2nd level]
Independent variable [3rd level]
Dependent variables [3rd level]
Footnotes
Use footnotes placed on their respective pages (not endnotes).
Hypotheses
If your study contains any hypothesis, fully and separately state each hypothesis you tested separately. Phrase it in the present tense.
Abbreviations and Language
Avoid use of abbreviations. If it is necessary then use full name for the first time and then use abbreviations in the subsequent paragraphs.
Tables and Figures
Tables and figures can enhance both the reader’s understanding of information and the efficiency of its presentation. However, just as too many figures and tables can detract from the overall narrative, we encourage the judicious use of tables and figures and we discourage their overuse.
Number tables and figures consecutively (one series for tables, one for figures). Place them at the end of your manuscript, but indicate the position of each in the text as follows:
————————————
Insert Table 2 about here
————————————
Figures, unlike tables, contain drawings (e.g., an arrow, boxes). Make sure your figures print out clearly so that they can be scanned. Do not use color. Sample Tables and a Figure are given below.
Fig. 1. WSN performance under sensor faults and fault-tolerance: (a) the number of remaining sensors in each cluster; (b) communication cost when fr = 50%.
Table 1
Procurement Costs in Scenario 3
| Cloud vendors | C-DSIC | Procurement Cost ($)
SC-BICD |
C-OPT |
| 10 | 270.54 | 370.54 | — |
| 30 | 225.33 | 125.33 | .05 |
| 50 | 124.45 | 64.45 | .06 |
| 70 | 39.57 | 59.57 | -.23* |
| 90 | 22.34 | 12.34 | .07 |
| 100 | 43.32 | 13.32 | -.02 |
Citations
IEEE in-text citations consist of a number enclosed in square brackets, which corresponds to the appropriate resource in the reference list at the end of your paper. The in-text citation numbers begin at [1], and proceed in ascending order throughout your paper – unless you are referencing a resource you have already cited in your text (in which case you use the previously-assigned number). Be aware that any edits to the references in the text of your paper may mean renumbering your reference list. There is very little variation in the formatting of IEEE in-text citations, regardless of whether you are citing a book, a web page, or a journal article.
The in-text citation is placed inside the punctuation of a sentence, i.e., “… similar to what was found by other researchers [5].” You do not need to include author names or dates in IEEE in-text citations, unless it is relevant to the text of the paper. The in-text reference may be used like a footnote, or as a noun.
Single Reference
- as demonstrated by Smith [10].
- according to [6], there is little evidence that …
Multiple References
- as Jones demonstrates in [2]–[5].
- as demonstrated earlier [10], [12]–[14], [16].
Reference within Reference
… as demonstrated in [2, pp.21-26].
Three or more Authors
Zang et al. [19] found …
Books
Citation elements required and general format:
Author(s) (if editor(s), include “, Ed(s).” after name), Title of Book: Subtitle of Book, edition. City, State abbreviation or Country of publication: Publisher, Year.
Reference list citation examples – Book
In IEEE style, use only the initials for the first and middle author names. Give the names of all authors unless there are seven or more, in which case you may use, for example, “A. Smith et al.”, where Smith is the name of the first author. Capitalize the important words in the title.
One Author:
- Lampton, Unified Field Theory: For the Engineer and the Applied Scientist. Weinheim, Germany: Wiley-VCH, 2009.
One Editor:
- W. Smither, Ed., Performance Appraisal: State of the Art in Practice. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 1998.
Two Authors:
- L. Herman and C. G. Garrard, Practical Problems in Mathematics for Electricians, 6th ed. Albany, NY: Delmar/Thomason Learning, 2002.
Two Editors:
- Korkin and F. Rosei, Eds., Nanoelectronics and Photonics: From Atoms to Materials, Devices and Architectures. New York, NY: Springer, 2008.
No Author or Editor:
[5] New Concise World Atlas. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2007.
Article or Book Chapter in Book
Citation elements required and general format:
Author(s) (if editor, include “, Ed(s).” after name), “Title of chapter or entry or case study,” in Title of Book, edition. City, State abbreviation or Country of publication: Publisher, Year, pp. xx-xx.
Reference list citation examples
In IEEE style, use only the initials for the authors’ first and middle names. Place the title of the chapter or article in quotation marks, and capitalize the first word of the title, subtitle, and any proper nouns. Italicize the title of the book, and capitalize the important words.
Chapter in a Book, no Editor:
- Solie, “WAN protocols and technologies: Frame relay,” in CCIE Practical Studies, vol. 1. Indianapolis, IN: Cisco Press, 2001, pp. 81-104.
Chapter in a Book, part of a Series (where M. Abramowitz and I. A. Stegun are the editors of the book):
- J. Slater, “Confluent hypergeometric functions,” in Handbook of Mathematical Functions, with Formulas, Graphs, and Mathematical Tables, vol. 55, Applied Mathematics Series, M. Abramowitz and I. A. Stegun, Eds. New York, NY: Dover Publications, 1972, pp. 503-555.
Journal Article
Citation elements required and general format for journal:
Author(s), “Title of journal article,” Abbreviated Title of Periodical, vol. #, issue #, pp. xx-xx, Month Year.
Reference list citation examples – Journal Article
In IEEE style, use only the initials for the author’s first and middle names. For the title of the article, only capitalize the first word of the title, subtitle, and any proper nouns. Spell out the entire title of a periodical, or abbreviate it in a standardized way (see https://www.ieee.org/documents/ieeecitationref.pdf for details). If the author is unknown, begin with the title. Abbreviate the month of publication in a standardized way (Jan., Feb., Mar., Apr., May, June, Jul., Aug., Sept., Oct., Nov., Dec.).
One Author:
- Strickland, “24 hours at Fukushima,” IEEE Spectr., vol. 48, no. 11, pp. 35-42, Nov. 2011.
Two or more Authors:
- Bareib, B. N. Tiwari, and A. Hochmeister, “Nano antenna array for terahertz detection,” IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, vol. 59, no. 10, pp. 2751-2757, Oct. 2011.
No Author:
[10] “Publication information for authors,” IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, vol. 59, no. 10, pp. C3, Oct. 2011.
Handbooks and Manuals
Citation elements required and general format:
Author(s). Title of Handbook/Manual, edition. Company, City, State abbreviation or
Country of publication, Year, pp. xx-xx.
Reference list citation examples – Handbooks, and Manuals
In IEEE style, use only the initials for the author’s first and middle names. For the title of the report, handbook, or manual, capitalize all the important words. If there is no author, begin with the title.
No Author:
[11] Commercial/Institutional Ground-Source Heat Pump Engineering Manual,
1st ed., ASHRAE, Atlanta, GA, 1995, pp. 23-42.
No Author, No Edition information:
[12] 2.5 Turbo I Electronic Fuel Injection (MPI): Diagnostic Procedures, Chrysler Canada Ltd., Windsor, Canada, 1991, pp. 98-109.
Published Conference Proceedings
Citation elements required and general format for journal:
Author(s). “Title of paper,” in Conference Name, City, State Abbreviation or Country,
Year, pp. xx-xx.
Reference list citation examples
In IEEE style, use only the initials for the author’s first and middle names. For the title of the paper, only capitalize the first word of the title, subtitle, and any proper nouns. If there is no author, begin with the title.
Two Authors:
[13] G. U. Burkhardt and T. Egloffstein. “Asphalt liners in landfill construction,” in
Construction for a Sustainable Environment, Vilnius, Lithuania, 2008, pp. 101-109.
Paper Presented at Conference
Citation elements required and general format for journal:
Author(s), “Title of paper,” presented at the Name of Conference, City of Conference,
Abbreviation of State or Country, year.
Reference list citation examples
In IEEE style, use only the initials for the author’s first and middle names. For the title of the paper, only capitalize the first word of the title, subtitle, and any proper nouns.
One Author:
[14] H. Zhang, “LaB6 field emission gun: Making a decades old dream come true with nanotechnology,” presented at the International Conference on
Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology for Sustainable Development, Kathmandu, Nepal, 2011.
Online Sources
Online Article from Library Database
Citation elements required and general format:
Author(s). (Year, Month). Title of article. Title of Journal [Online]. Volume(Issue), page numbers. Available: permanent link or DOI for article.
Reference list citation examples – Online Article from Library Database
In IEEE style, use only the initials for the author’s first and middle names. For the title of the paper, only capitalize the first word of the title, subtitle, and any proper nouns. Abbreviate the month of publication in a standardized way (Jan., Feb., Mar., Apr., May, June, Jul., Aug., Sept., Oct., Nov., Dec.)
One Author:
[15] E. J. M. Carranza. (2011, Dec.). Geocomputation of mineral exploration targets. Computers & Geosciences [Online]. 37(12), 1907-1916. Available: doi:10.1016/j.cageo.2011.11.009
If you are not able to find all of the information identified in the general format, include all that is available from the source.
Webpage or Document from a Website
Citation elements required and general format:
Author(s). (Year, Month Day). Title of website, webpage, or document [Online].
Available: link to article
Reference list citation examples
In IEEE style, use only the initials for the author’s first and middle names. For the title of the webpage, capitalize only the first word, subtitle, and any proper nouns. Abbreviate the month of publication in a standardized way (Jan., Feb., Mar., Apr., May, June, Jul., Aug., Sept., Oct., Nov., Dec.). If the author is unknown, begin with the article title.
One Author:
[17] K. Bonsor and J. Strickland. (2007, Mar. 20). How nanotechnology works [Online]. Available: https://science.howstuffworks.com/nanotechnology.htm
No Author:
[18] NASA picks a winter rest stop for Mars rover Opportunity (2012, Jan. 6) [Online]. Available: https://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45902372/ ns/technology_and_science-space/#.Twdx7vJRB8E
No Author and no date (use n.d.):
[19] Electrical engineer (n.d.) [Online]. Available: https://wordnetweb.princeton.edu /perl/webwn?s=electrical%20engineer
Guidelines for submitting figures/images:
Make sure you use uniform lettering and sizing of your original artwork.
Number the illustrations according to their sequence in the text.
Line illustrations should be submitted at 900 dpi.
Halftones and color should be submitted at a minimum of 300 dpi.
Save as either TIF, JPG files.
Black and White art must be submitted as grayscale – not RGB.
PowerPoint or Excel files should NOT be submitted.
Language editing Services for Authors
Separate English editing charges will be applied to authors that require extensive English language editing or formatting. For details of language editing charges, please contact contact@kkgpublishing.com. Non-English speaking authors who would like to refine their use of language in their manuscripts might consider using a professional editing service. In order to enhance the chances of acceptance of a manuscript by the peer-reviewers, non-native English speaking colleagues are encouraged to use professional English editing services before submitting a manuscript. The professional editing services may be acquired from other English-language editing firms as well, such as Editage (www.editage.com) and Enago (https://www.enago.com)
International Journal of Technology and Engineering Studies (IJTES)
Manuscript Submission Guidelines
Information for Authors
All submissions should be done thorough Word Processing file from which title page (including author name and affiliation and any acknowledgments or author notes) must be removed. After removing the author(s) detail go to the web site here and follow the directions. Each article usually has two part, i. Main Manuscript and ii. Title Page not for Review. The manuscript should include everything (i.e. title, abstract, key words, introduction, literature review, methods, results, findings references, tables and graphs) other then the authors, names, affiliation, addresses, acknowledgements, and any other information that may be used to identify the author(s).
Criteria for Publication
For the publication in IJTES, a manuscript must make strong theoretical and empirical contributions to the field of engineering and technology. Authors who are interested in publishing with IJTES should strive to produce original, interesting, valuable, insightful, and important research. The acceptance of article for publication highly depends upon the originality, value, importance, and significance. Submissions that do not have strong theoretical or empirical contribution will not be reviewed.
Each submitted manuscript would be assigned to action editor for evaluation. The action editor will decide whether to forward the manuscript to the reviewers. Typically, papers should be no longer than 40 double-spaced pages (using one-inch margins, left aligned, and Times New Roman 12-point font) including references, tables, figures, and appendixes.
Submission Requirements
Before submitting a manuscript to IJTES, the authors must make sure and confirm that
- Their manuscript has not already been published, reviewed and submitted to any other journal during the review period at IJTES. Articles presented and published in the proceedings of any academic conferences or workshops will be considered for publication in IJTES.
- Their manuscript has not previously been submitted to IJTES for review.
- The working papers or prior drafts of submitted manuscript that are posted on a website (e.g., personal, departmental, university, organizational) or a database will be taken down during the review process.
Peer Review Process and Time
International Journal of Technology and Engineering Studies (IJTES) operates a strictly anonymous peer-review process in which the reviewers’ names are withheld from the author(s) and, the authors’ name from the reviewer.
Desk Review: On receiving a manuscript, the editor conducts a preliminary screening to assess the degree to which the manuscript fits the criteria in IJTES’s ‘Aims and Scope’. Submissions that fail to satisfy our criteria may be returned to the authors either as a desk reject or desk edit. In case of desk edit, the authors are asked to edit the manuscript and then resubmit.
Review process: For each manuscript that passes the desk review, the editor assigns an action editor (either him- or herself or an associate editor or a guest editor) and two reviewers. The manuscript’s action editor sends the manuscript to two reviewers who are specialists in their fields for review . After receiving the reviewers’ comments on the manuscript, the action editor makes publication decisions about it. However, these decisions are made in conjunction with recommendations provided by the reviewers. All submission is blind reviewed; manuscripts prepared in a way that compromises blind review may be returned for revision prior to being submitted to the reviewers.
Review Time: The journal strives to provide developmental and constructive feedback to authors within approximately five weeks. The peer-review process usually takes four weeks depending upon the manuscript size and availability of the editorial members. However, the initial quality of the manuscript can dramatically influence both the efficiency and effectiveness of review process. The better developed a manuscript and the ideas it contains, the easier it will be to review, and provide timely feedback to authors. We therefore encourage authors to ask scholarly colleagues to review their work prior to submission to the IJTES.
The Guidelines for Reviewers can be viewed here.
The submissions made to the conferences organized by our associated organizations generally do not go through peer-review process because the submissions made to our associated conferences already go through a rigorous review process. For manuscripts already presented at our associated conferences, the action editor usually makes a decision for possible acceptance, rejection or revision.
Formatting
IJTES uses IEEE guidelines for in-text Citations, Tables, Figures/Images, References, and Appendixes. All submissions are required to be formatted according to the guidelines available here. The action editor may return manuscripts that do not commensurate with the formatting guidelines to the authors for revision prior to submission to the full review process.
Language Editing-Author Services
For authors who are non-native English speakers writing in English as a second language, KKG Publishing offers language editing, or ‘polishing’ of academic papers, including manuscripts, journal articles, abstracts, and dissertations. Upon acceptance your manuscript will be checked for correct grammar, spelling, style, sentence structure, and readability.
Licensing information and permissions
Requests for reproduction or translating individual articles should be sent to contact@kkgpublishing.com
For reprint permission and licensing inquiries, please contact: contact@kkgpublishing.com
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| IJBAS | Online only | Individual | Permanent | Credit Card | USD 120.00 (professional)USD 50 (Student) | Subscribe | |
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Editorial board
Editorial Board For International Journal Of Technology And Engineering Studies
Sanjay Pareek– Department of Architecture, Nihon University, India.
Narendra Kohli-Computer Science and Engineering Department, Harcourt Butler Technological Institute, India.
Amir Najafgholipour– Department of Space Science and Technology, Shiraz University of Technology, Iran.
Mousa Farhadi-Department of Mechanical Enginering, Babol Noshirvani University of Technology, Iran.
Jerry J. Wu– Department of Environmental Engineering and Science, Feng Chia University, Tiwan.
Congo Tak Shing Ching-Department of Electrical Engineering, National Chi Nan University, Taiwan.
Mohammad Luqman-Department of Basic Sciences, A’Sharqiyah University, Oman.
Jahangir Sarker– Department of Fisheries and Marine Science, Noakhali Science and Technology University, Bangladesh.
Jasper Nathan– Water and Environmental Science & Engineering, Nelson Mandela African Institution of Science & Technology, South Africa.
Yusufu Abeid Chande Jande-Department of Mechanical Engineering, Nelson Mandela African Institute of Science and Technology, Tanzania.
Nazir Ahmad Suhail-Department of Computer Sciences, Kampala University, Uganda.
Oloke, Julius Kola-Department of Microbiology & Biotechnology, Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Nigeria.
Abdul Majeed Muzathik– Department of Mechanical Engineering, South Eastern University, Sri Lanka.
- W. Ranjith Amarasinghe– Department of Mechanical Engineering, The University of Moratwua, Sri Lanka.
Kuo-Lin Huang– Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, National Pingtung University of Science and Technology, Taiwan.
Josephine Espinoza Tondo– Faculty of Biological Science, Philippine Normal University, Philippines.
International Journal of Technology and Engineering Studies (IJTES)
International Journal of Technology and Engineering Studies (IJTES) is based on double-blind peer-reviewed that is committed to advancing the field of engineering and technology. IJTES publishes studies from different fields of engineering and technology. The journal contributes to the field of technology and engineering by publishing original studies, empirical investigations that use a variety of empirical methods (e.g., quantitative, qualitative, field, laboratory, simulations, meta-analysis and combination) and comprehensive review articles. Six issues are published in a year by IJTES.
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