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BMJ Open is a peer-reviewed open access medical journal that is dedicated to publishing medical research from all disciplines and therapeutic areas. [1] It is published by BMJ and considers all research study types, from protocols through phase I trials to meta-analyses, including small, specialist studies, and negative studies.
This template counts the number of words that goes into its first parameter. It serves as a basic word count function in areas where word count is important (such as Arbitration Committee statements, etc.)
A template is a Wikipedia page created to be included in other pages. It usually contains repetitive material that may need to show up on multiple articles or pages, often with customizable input. Templates sometimes use MediaWiki parser functions, nicknamed "magic words", a simple scripting language. Template pages are found in the template ...
Use {{open access}} to indicate manually that a research-based publication is available under open access (not merely that it's accessible without subscription etc.). For citations input with citation templates such as {{cite journal}}, use the relevant parameters (such as |doi-access=free) to indicate the access level for a given identifier.
{{google|1 pound in kilograms {{=}}}} 1 pound in kilograms = Use Template:= to add an = sign to trigger Google Calculator when necessary; that template cannot be substituted. {{google|1 pound in kilograms}} 1 pound in kilograms: Google may display Calculator results for some expressions even if they lack a trailing equals sign.
Template documentation subpages using {{documentation}} are named and formatted using the following general pattern, for consistency. Suppose your template is named Template:X. Edit the template and append the following at the end of the template code, or use {{subst:doc-code}}: [--last line of your template code--] <noinclude> {{Documentation ...
The BMJ offers several alerting services, free on request: [37] This Week In The BMJ: A weekly table of contents email, latest research, video, blogs and editorial comment. Editor's choice: The Editor-in-Chief or an Associate Editor introduces a selection of the latest research, medical news, comment, and education each week.