Mathews Open Access Journals follow certain ethical standards to make sure high-quality scientific publications, to attain public confidence in scientific findings.
Plagiarism/ Duplicate Submission: Mathews Open Access Journals firmly encourages original manuscripts and must not use the words, figures, or ideas of others without attribution. All sources must be cited at the point they are used, and reuse of wording must be limited and be attributed or quoted in the text. The content should not be submitted/ published elsewhere with other publishing groups. Our quality control teams check for the plagiarism through software to detect the overlapping of content and similar text in submitted manuscripts. Manuscripts that are found to have been plagiarized from a manuscript by other authors, whether published or unpublished, will be rejected and the authors may incur sanctions. Any published articles may need to be corrected or retracted.
Data Fabrication and Falsification: If the submitted manuscripts are found to have either fabricated or falsified research work, i.e. methods, experimental results, including the manipulation of images will be immediately rejected.
Conflicts of Interest: Authors must declare all potential interests in a ‘Conflicts of interest’ section, which should explain why the interest may be a conflict. If there are none, the authors should state “The author(s) declare(s) that there are no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.” Submitting authors are responsible for coauthors declaring their interests.
Human and Animal Rights: Ethical clearance documents need to be provided if applicable. The work involving animal models and human volunteers need to submit the necessary statements.
In the above publication ethical cases if the violations are found, the editorial office is authorized to take action accordingly.
Published : 12th June 2023
Authors : Ana Almeida*, João Magalhães
Citation : Almeida A, et al. (2023). The History of Hypnosis. Mathews J HIV AIDS. 6(2):25.
Published : 02nd June 2023
Authors : Juan Carlos Mirabal Requena1,*, Belkis Alvarez Escobar2, Carlos Jesús Ruiz Santos3, Doriam Baracaldo Laureiro4, Héctor Luis Hurtado Luna5
Citation : Requena JCM, et al. (2023). Faced with COVID-19, Personal Care to Take Care of Others. Mathews J HIV AIDS. 6(1):24.
Published : 20th May 2023
Authors : Yohannis Yilma*, Metasebia Getachew, Asrat Fenta, Yordanos Mezemir
Citation : Yilma Y, et al. (2023). Assessment of Undernutrition and Its Influencing Factors among Prisoners Living with HIV/AIDS in North Shoa Zone Amhara Region Ethiopia, 2022. Mathews J HIV AIDS. 6(1):23.
Published : 03rd April 2021
Authors : S.Tshimanga1*, A. Fouad1, K. Fakiri1, N. Rada1, G. Draiss1, N. Soraa2, B. Admou3, M. Bouskraoui1
Citation : S Tshimanga, A Fouad, K Fakiri, N Rada, G Draiss, N Soraa, et al. (2021). Secondary Bronchiectasis due to HIV Infection in Children. Mathews J HIV AIDS. 5(1):21.
Published : 25th September 2019
Authors : Olorunfemi Stephen
Citation : Stephen O. (2019). HIV Drugs Resistance - A Possible Consequence of Massive Anti-Retroviral Roll Out in Developing Countries - an Urgent Call For 1
Proper Monitoring (Part 1). Mathews J HIV AIDS 4(1): 20.
Published : 12th November 2018
Authors : Paulo Pereira1*, Sandra Xavier2
Citation : Pereira P and Xavier S. (2018). Computation of the Diagnostic Uncertainty as an Alternative to the Determination of Measurement Uncertainty for HIV Qualitative Binary Results. Mathews J HIV AIDS 3(1): 019