Alcohol intake in relation to non-fatal and fatal coronary heart disease and stroke: EPIC-CVD case-cohort study
BMJ 2018; 361 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k934 (Published 29 May 2018) Cite this as: BMJ 2018;361:k934- Status
- Comments
- Date
- Original article
- Access document
- 18 July 2017
- First decision
- Access document
- 11 September 2017
- Author response
- Access document
- 12 September 2017
- First revised article
- Access document
- 12 September 2017
- Second decision
- Access Document
- 23 September 2017
- Second response
- Access Document
- 30 October 2017
- Second revised article
- Access Document
- 30 October 2017
- Third decision
- Access Document
- 04 January 2018
- Third revised article
- Access Document
- 19 January 2018
- Fourth decision
- Access document
- 28 March 2018
- Fourth response
- Access document
- 28 March 2018
- ICJME forms
- Access document
- 28 March 2018
- ICJME forms
- Access document
- 28 March 2018
For research papers The BMJ has fully open peer review. This means that accepted research papers submitted from September 2014 onwards usually have their prepublication history posted alongside them on thebmj.com.
This prepublication history comprises all previous versions of the manuscript, the study protocol (submitting the protocol is mandatory for all clinical trials and encouraged for all other studies at The BMJ), the report from the manuscript committee meeting, the reviewers’ comments, and the authors’ responses to all the comments from reviewers and editors.
In rare instances we determine after careful consideration that we should not make certain portions of the prepublication record publicly available. For example, in cases of stigmatised illnesses we seek to protect the confidentiality of reviewers who have these illnesses. In other instances there may be legal or regulatory considerations that make it inadvisable or impermissible to make available certain parts of the prepublication record.
In all instances in which we have determined that elements of the prepublication record should not be made publicly available, we expect that authors will respect these decisions and also will not share this information.