Data Archiving Permissions
Flexible archiving policies supporting data preservation and research accessibility for pediatric science.
Research Preservation Standards
Pediatric Health And Nutrition supports comprehensive data archiving to ensure long-term accessibility and reproducibility of published child health research. Our policies enable authors to preserve and share research materials appropriately.
We recognize that transparent data practices strengthen the pediatric research enterprise and accelerate clinical translation for child health.
Authors retain significant rights to archive and distribute their pediatric work across multiple platforms, maximizing research accessibility while respecting publication agreements for child health science.
Institutional Repositories
Authors may deposit published pediatric articles in their institutional repositories immediately upon publication without embargo restrictions.
Subject Repositories
Deposit in pediatric-relevant subject repositories such as medical preprint servers is permitted and encouraged for child health research visibility.
Personal Websites
Authors may post published pediatric articles on personal or laboratory websites with appropriate citation and linking to the published version.
Research Networks
Sharing through academic social networks including ResearchGate and Academia.edu is permitted for pediatric publications.
Pediatric Health And Nutrition encourages authors to make underlying child health research data available when possible. Data sharing supports reproducibility and enables secondary analyses advancing pediatric knowledge.
- Raw pediatric data may be deposited in appropriate public repositories with dataset DOIs
- Data availability statements should describe access conditions for child health datasets
- Pediatric patient data requires appropriate anonymization and ethics compliance
- Code and analysis scripts supporting child health findings may be shared through code repositories
Child privacy protection: Pediatric research involving minors requires enhanced privacy protections. Ensure complete de-identification of all child data and images before archiving or sharing.
When archiving pediatric research, clearly distinguish between preprint versions and final published articles. Link archived versions to the published DOI when possible. Updated versions should reference previous deposits appropriately.
Pediatric Health And Nutrition partners with digital preservation services to ensure permanent accessibility of all published pediatric content. These partnerships guarantee your child health research remains available regardless of organizational changes.
Questions About Archiving?
Contact us for guidance on data archiving policies and best practices for pediatric research preservation.
Contact Editorial Office