IJTLD CRD

The open access journal features research addressing chronic respiratory diseases in low- and middle-income countries.

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IJTLD CRD

Aims and scope

IJTLD Chronic Respiratory Disease (IJTLD CRD) is a new open access journal (fully compliant with Plan S).

Featuring the latest research on chronic lung conditions in low- and middle-income countries, IJTLD CRD will improve access to knowledge and influence policy and practice for better health. Each issue will cover a mix of articles, including: post TB lung disease (PTLD), asthma, COPD, impact of air pollution, lung damage in smokers, interstitial lung disease, bronchiectasis, long COVID, sleep apnoea, occupational lung disease and interventional pulmonology. This critically neglected area accounts for an estimated 4 million annual deaths and affects 28-90 million people with PTLD.

Clinician examining patient

Call for papers

We encourage authors working on chronic respiratory disease to submit their latest research on all aspects of the management and care of patients. We will consider Editorials, Meeting Reports, Original Research (including methodology papers and qualitative research), Reviews, Viewpoints, Study Protocols, Case Series, Case Reports and Letters.

We are particularly keen to promote research on early diagnosis and treatments – including the latest therapeutic advances that have relevance across a wide range of respiratory conditions. Our aim is to highlight the importance of these conditions to influence policymakers and improve clinical care in LMICs.

For all queries please e-mail the Editorial team at journal@theunion.org.

Author information

While preparing their article, authors should refer to the Instructions for Authors to check that they have complied with our requirements – see links below.

Once complete, please submit your manuscript at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/ijtld

Sponsorship

Supplements and article series are a highly-effective way of highlighting a specific topic to researchers, clinicians and decision makers in respiratory health.

Being an Open Access journal, IJTLD CRD has no barriers to access and can reach readers in health centres, medical, university and pharmaceutical institutes, along with civil society, patients and carers.

All content will be freely available and acknowledge the sponsors support and readers will receive emails to highlight sponsored content.

Fast-Track Articles

In order to share scientific research of immediate concern as rapidly as possible, The Union is fast-tracking the publication of certain accepted articles from the IJTLD, IJTLD OPEN and PHA and publishing them in full on our website, prior to their publication in the Journals. Read fast-track articles:

Compliance with intermittent preventive malaria treatment in pregnancy at a tertiary hospital in Sierra Leone

Published on

In this article, part of the TB, HIV and Malaria Series to be published in the Q2 issue of PHA, the authors examine uptake of intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy in Sierra Leone, showing low compliance with the recommended minimum of three doses, largely associated with insufficient antenatal care contacts.

Parenteral artesunate compliance and hospital outcomes in children under-five with suspected severe malaria in Sierra Leone

Published on

In this article, part of the TB, HIV and Malaria Series to be published in the Q2 issue of PHA, the authors assess adherence to national severe malaria management guidelines in children under five in Sierra Leone and its association with hospital outcomes, highlighting suboptimal artesunate dosing and related adverse outcomes.

Mapping Malaria Hotspots through Spatial and Spatio-Temporal Analysis in Sierra Leone, 2021-2024

Published on

In this article part of the TB, HIV and Malaria Series to be published in the Q2 issue of PHA, the authors analyse the spatial and temporal distribution of malaria in Sierra Leone, identifying persistent hotspots and no significant association with rainfall. The findings highlight the need for targeted, subnational interventions to address persistent hotspots.