Plagiarism involves the theft of another person's words, ideas, or work and presenting them as one's own. It also includes using someone else's production without proper attribution. This is considered literary theft, or plagiarism, and Journal of clinical and medical case reports of surgery enforces a strict process for detecting plagiarism in all articles before publication in our international journals.
According to universal standards, duplicating another's work without proper credit is deemed plagiarism. Some common forms of plagiarism include:
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Copying someone else's work exactly or with only minor changes and claiming it as your own.
- Using ideas or words from another source without proper citation.
- Failing to place quoted material in quotation marks.
- Misattributing the source of a quotation.
- Paraphrasing a sentence structure from a source without giving proper credit.
- Copying a significant portion of text or ideas from a single source, even if credit is given to the original source.
We place strong emphasis on both the quality and originality of submitted articles. All manuscripts, abstracts, and chapters undergo thorough plagiarism checks on the day of submission. If any content is found to be plagiarized, we immediately reject the manuscript.