Open Access
Open access options
This journal offers authors two choices to publish their research:
Open Access
Articles are freely available to both subscribers and the wider public with permitted reuse.
An Open Access fee is payable by authors or their research funder.
Subscription
Articles are made available to subscribers as well as developing countries and patient groups through our access programs.
No open access publication fee.
In accordance with Funding Body requirements, Elsevier does offer alternative open access publishing options. Visit https://www.elsevier.com/openaccess for full information.
Your publication choice will have no effect on the peer review process or acceptance of your submission.
Details on Open Access Articles:
User Rights
All articles published open access will be immediately and permanently free for everyone to read and download. We offer authors a choice of user licenses, which define the permitted reuse of articles (see https://www.elsevier.com/openaccesslicenses). We are continuously working with our author communities to select the best choice of license options, currently being defined for this journal as follows:
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs (CC BY-NC-ND)
The Article Publishing Charges (APCs) are:
Artile Type | Article Publishing Charge (excl. taxes) |
---|---|
Full Length Articles and Reviews | EUR 1500 |
Guidelines, Consensus and Recommendations | EUR 2500 |
Funding Body Agreements
Elsevier has established agreements with funding bodies, including Wellcome Trust and Research Councils UK. This ensures authors can comply with funding body open access policies and may also be reimbursed for their publication fees.
Elsevier supports responsible sharing
Find out how you can share your research published in Elsevier journals.
Green Open Access (e.g. self-archiving)
Authors can share their research in a variety of different ways and Elsevier has a number of green open access options available. We recommend authors see our green open access page for further information. An author can also self-archive their author manuscript immediately and enable public access from their institution''s repository after an embargo period. This is the version that has been accepted for publication and which typically includes author-incorporated changes suggested during submission, peer review and in editor-author communications.
Embargo Period
For subscription articles, an appropriate amount of time is needed for journals to deliver value to subscribing customers before a manuscript becomes available for free to the public. This is called an embargo period and it begins from the date the article is formally published online in its final and fully citable form. Find out more
This journal has an embargo period of 12 months.
Learn More about:
- Publishing open access with Elsevier
- Funding body agreements
- Open access license policy
- Open access pricing policy
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