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| Injury Prevention Site help
Accessing content Browsing tips Tracking and alerts FAQs > Online journals resource centre Browsing current and previous issues To view the contents of the current issue, click on the 'Current Issue' link or journal cover image on the home page. The table of contents also includes a link to an index of authors for the current issue. When viewing the table of contents, you can search for words in the text of the articles in that issue by entering words in the search box and clicking the Enter button. Read Tips for better searching to learn how searching works in BMJ journals. To view contents of upcoming issues, click on the 'Forthcoming Table of Contents' link on the home page. You can then use the Find function in your browser to find words in the titles listed in the table of contents. To see an article, click on its [Full Text] link. To see one Abstract, click on its [Abstract] link. To review many Abstracts, check the boxes to the left of the titles you want and click Get All Checked Abstract(s).
Pay for journal access You can purchase access to individual Injury Prevention articles. Browse through the available content and select the article you wish to access. When you are prompted to sign in, select the 'Pay for Access' option. You can purchase access to any content in Injury Prevention. At any point when you are prompted to sign in to the journal, select the 'SitePass' option. Tips for better searching Please see Help with Searching for detailed information about searching Injury Prevention.
As a default, titles of articles retrieved as a result of searching are returned in relevance ranked order. The 'closest matches' will be articles that match more of your search terms, that match your terms more closely, that have more occurrences of any one term, and that have occurrences earlier in the Abstract or article. You have several choices as to the number of 'closest matches' retrieved. In the list of titles retrieved by your search, To see one Abstract, click on its [Abstract] link. To review many Abstracts, check the boxes to the left of the titles you want and click on Get All Checked Abstract(s). Search across multiple journals
Find a word or phrase in text The search engine employed by all our websites highlights your search terms in the articles your search retrieves. The find function in your browser can be used to quickly find words or phrases within a single webpage. Use 'control + f' to open your web rowser's find dialogue box. Save searches and articles using My Folders My Folders allows you to save articles and searches for future use. If you see an article that you want to keep for future reference, click the 'Add article to my folders' link on the menu bar at the right of the page. You can also save searches by clicking the 'Save this search' link at the top of the search results page. You may create multiple 'file folders' on specific topics. It's like having a virtual file cabinet with all your favourite articles and searches. Create / modify folders preferences: > Go to Injury Prevention My Folders Finding similar and related articles When reading an article of interest, a quick and easy way to find similar articles is through the use of the 'Related Articles' link in the right hand menu bar of any article page. This will retrieve a list of related articles from PubMed and display it in your browser. Clicking on the citation to any of these related articles will retrieve the full citation and abstract in MEDLINE format. Details: Accessing cited articles When an article cites another from a HighWire-hosted journal, hyperlinks have been created from reference citations to the articles to which they refer that allow you to move from the original article to the abstract of the cited article. These inter-journal links take you to the abstract of the cited reference. Skip the 'sign in' page
For more information about cookies, please read the related tip: Cookies and your privacy: why we use them. Note: Auto sign-in is not recommended if you use a shared computer because it would allow others to access your subscription to Injury Prevention, and change your password / Subscriber Services. At any time you may sign out of Injury Prevention using the "Sign Out" option at the top of most pages which deletes the cookie file from your computer. If you use a computer that others have access to, we strongly recommend that you sign out when you have finished. Faster web-page navigation To return to your previous location after clicking on a link that takes you to another section on the page, or to a different page, click on the 'Back' button of your browser. The 'Back' button will return you to your previous location more quickly and without the need for lengthy scrolling. See the related tip: Open the same page in multiple windows. Open the same page in multiple windows In many situations it is helpful to have different sections of an article appear in two different browser windows. To open a link from your current page in a new window: Note: The second window may obscure the first so that it will be necessary to move and resize the new window before both can be viewed on your monitor.
Save papers as an HTML web page Using Internet Explorer, Firefox, etc.:1 Open the HTML version of the article you wish to save. 2 Choose 'Save' or 'Save as' and select the 'Web page, complete' or 'Web archive' option and save the article to a new directory (folder) that you've created for this purpose. This last step is important because you will be saving all of the graphics files contained within the article so saving it to your desktop can cause considerable clutter! Increase the font size for your browser In most browsers you can change the font size through the 'View' menu. Look for something called 'Text Zoom', 'Text Size', 'Increase Font', 'Make Text Bigger' or similar. Alternatively, hold down the 'control' key on your keyboard whilst using the scroll wheel on your mouse to change the font size. Turn off moving images on a web page You can stop moving images in some cases by clicking the STOP button on your browser. This will stop the loading of everything on the page, so make sure that the page itself has finished loading before you click the STOP button (check the status bar at the bottom of the browser). To reload a page, click the REFRESH button, usually next to the STOP button on the browser.
Upgrade your web browser How do you get the best appearance, speed and features from your browser? You get the newest version! As web browser technology develops, new capabilities become available which can improve the appearance of online articles as well as offer new features to facilitate your research activities. Download the latest version of any of the browsers below.
Suggested browser configuration: Set a bookmark for the Injury Prevention homepage. To view the PDF articles, you should have the Adobe Acrobat Reader installed on your computer and your browser should be configured to open PDF files in Acrobat. Using PDF documents To view the PDF version of an article click on the Full Text (PDF) link in the content box of the relevant article, or on the [PDF] link in the issue table of contents. If Adobe Acrobat Reader is installed on your computer and if your browser is configured to open PDF files in Acrobat, you will retrieve a version of the article that looks very much like the article in the printed Journal. Select Print under Acrobat's File menu to print this version. If you are unable to open a PDF article on Injury Prevention we recommend you upgrade your browser and try again. PDF files are very large and retrieving them may take several minutes. The speed depends primarily on the speed of your network connection, the volume of Internet traffic, and the speed of your own computer. You must display the PDF version in the Acrobat Reader before it can be printed. Because PDF files are large, you might wish to close any open PDF documents before opening a new one to avoid memory limitations. To save a copy of the PDF article use the Save a Copy option in Acrobat Reader (use the Save a copy tool bar button or select the option under Acrobat's File menu). If you are using an early version of Acrobat this feature may not be available, in which case we recommend that you download the latest version of Acrobat Reader using the link above. I'm trying to read a PDF online, but it is very difficult
Track topics, authors and articles CiteTrack will immediately alert you by email whenever new content in Injury Prevention (or any BMJ Journal) is published that matches criteria based on the topics, authors and articles you want to track. > Sign up to Injury Prevention CiteTrack now! Sign up for email alerts Sign up for email alerts for information direct to your inbox for new issue tables of content, publication ahead of print articles (Online First) and journal announcements. > Sign up for Injury Prevention email alerts now! Download an article to Citation Manager We provide a simple and direct method of acquiring article citations in the Medlars format compatible with import into personal bibliographic management software such as RefWorks, EndNote, Reference Manager, or ProCite.
If your citation manager does not support import of Medlars format, you may still use the Download function. After saving the citation to your local disk, open the citation file and manually copy/paste the information in the file into the appropriate fields in your personal bibliographic database. I can't connect to the Injury Prevention website Please note that our standard maintenance window is Saturday from 8:00 am-10:00 am Pacific time. During this window each weekend, there is a possibility of an approximately 10 minute long period of unavailability. Injury Prevention will never be offline for the entire two hour window - that is the time frame for possible maintenance. 1 If applicable, see if you can reach other web sites in your building (e.g., a server that is located in your building). If you can not, the problem is likely in your machine; otherwise continue to the next step.
4See if you can reach other sites at Stanford, e.g., http://www.stanford.edu. If you cannot, then the problem may be with Stanford's connectivity to the internet; otherwise continue to the next step.
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If you still have difficulty, please send us feedback. Why don't you have the current issue online? We publish new issues on the same schedule as the print edition. If you know that a new issue of the print journal has been published but don't see that issue appearing on the site you may be experiencing a caching problem. The most likely source of this caching problem is your own computer. To remove out-of-date pages from your cache you should clear the cache manually, in your web browser; usually: Tools > Internet options...> Cache > Clear cache. After clearing the cache you should close your browser, restart it and return to the Injury Prevention home page. If you still see the incorrect date reload the page several times using your browser's REFRESH button. If these steps fail to remove the outdated page, this would suggest that your internet traffic may be going through a proxy server which is failing to update itself properly. Unfortunately, you'll need to speak with your Internet Service Provider to resolve this problem. Viewing multimedia (video, audio) To view multimedia files on Injury Prevention you will need to have installed on your computer the appropriate helper application for the specific file type you wish to view. Your browser must also be configured to recognize the file type and open the file with the appropriate software. Most up to date browsers, are automatically configured to recognize the types of multimedia files used by Injury Prevention. However, if your browser prompts you to select an application to open a multimedia file, use the guide below to select the application from the list. If you do not have the relevant application installed on your computer you may download them below. Windows sers: Please note that you must also have video and sound cards on your computer and the appropriate driver software. Please consult your computer's owner manual for information on video and software cards/drivers.
Reading Injury Prevention offline If you are using one of the popular "offline browsers" that allow you to download content from a site and read it later, be aware that we impose one restriction on their use. In order for us to provide reliable, continuous, and timely access to Injury Prevention for all readers, we require that you configure your offline browser to request no more than one page per minute. Be aware that non-compliance with this rule will result in your access to Injury Prevention being blocked until you contact us and resolve the problem. If you repeatedly break this rule you will be permanently blocked from the site. Access to site pages via an Open Proxy Server is prohibited. Why are some author names misspelled? In some cases, author names containing accents and other diacritics and special characters are displayed incorrectly in the author index and table of contents. In these cases, the accented letters are usually dropped. Because these changes affect indexing of author names, you should avoid searching author names containing special characters until this problem is corrected. Why are the figures in articles so small? I can't read them The small pictures in the body text of articles are called "thumbnails." They are intended to be small enough to load quickly and large enough to get the general idea of what the image shows. Injury Prevention supports a two-step expansion of thumbnail images. Clicking on a thumbnail displays a larger version of a figure as well as the complete text of the figure's caption. You don't need any additional software to view this medium-size image. To view a high-resolution version of a figure, click on the medium-sized image or the link to "[View Larger Version of this Image]". Why are the figures listed out of order? We display a figure directly after the paragraph in which it is first mentioned. If an author chooses to label a figure "Figure 3" but refers to it in the text before Figures 1 or 2, the figures will appear out of order. Why are there "torn piece of paper" or "question mark" icons throughout the article? This could have two causes: either you have Auto Load Images turned off, or you have encountered an image which didn't get processed. If you have enabled Auto Load Images (in your web browser's Tools > Options) and the image still doesn't display, please send us Feedback and we'll investigate the problem. Cookies and your privacy: why we use them What is a Cookie?
Note: Unless you use the 'Auto Sign In' option on the sign in page, the cookie information we create in your browser is destroyed when you close your browser. If you use the 'Auto Sign In' option and accept the cookie, on future occasions, the system will set only one cookie, because the other cookies remain resident on your computer until you delete them using 'Sign Out.' Online journals resource centre HighWire Press -- 1,104,340+ free full-text articles.
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