Journal of Osteoarthritis and Cartilage

Journal of Osteoarthritis and Cartilage

Journal of Osteoarthritis and Cartilage – Data Archiving Permissions

Open Access & Peer-Reviewed

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Data Sharing and Reuse Policy

Data Archiving Permissions
Journal of Osteoarthritis and Cartilage

Support reproducible osteoarthritis science with transparent archiving pathways, clear access statements, and practical governance detail.

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Data Governance

Data Archiving Permissions and Transparency

JOC supports responsible archiving practices that enable verification and reuse while respecting privacy and legal obligations.

Journal of Osteoarthritis and Cartilage encourages data availability statements that provide practical access guidance for readers and secondary analysts.

When full public release is not feasible, controlled access pathways should be documented with clear eligibility and review criteria.

Transparent data governance strengthens trust in study conclusions and improves reproducibility confidence.

Accepted Models

Permitted Data Archiving Approaches

Different studies may require different data sharing pathways, but all must include clear disclosure.

Open Repository Deposit

De-identified datasets can be archived in recognized repositories with stable accession links.

Controlled Access Repositories

Sensitive datasets may use governed-access systems with documented request pathways.

Institutional Data Portals

University or hospital repositories are acceptable when access details are explicit.

Supplementary Files

Non-sensitive supporting datasets may be included in publication supplements.

Code Sharing

Analytical scripts should include version context and dependency notes.

Metadata-Only Notice

Where release is restricted, metadata should still indicate dataset existence and contact route.

Statement Requirements

What Authors Must Include

Data statements should be operationally useful and aligned with ethics approvals.

  • Repository name, persistent identifier, and stable URL when available.
  • Description of dataset scope and whether files are raw, processed, or aggregated.
  • Access conditions including open, controlled, embargoed, or request-based access.
  • Legal, ethical, or contract constraints that affect redistribution rights.
  • Contact details and expected process for controlled access requests.
  • Versioning information if datasets or scripts may be updated after publication.

Data and code policies should be planned during manuscript drafting, not after acceptance, to prevent avoidable production delays.

If access is restricted, provide clear rationale so readers can interpret reuse limits transparently.

Reproducibility Value

Why Archiving Quality Matters for the Field

High-quality archiving supports cumulative evidence building across osteoarthritis and cartilage research.

Structured data disclosures make it easier for reviewers, replication teams, and evidence synthesis groups to evaluate analytical reliability.

Transparent archiving also supports cross-study comparisons and improves confidence in translational interpretation.

JOC may request clarification when data statements are incomplete or inconsistent with ethics and consent declarations.

Best practice: include data governance details in the first submission to reduce revision friction and accelerate publication readiness.

Data statements should specify repository path, access conditions, and request governance details.

Controlled-access datasets must document review criteria and expected response timelines.

Versioning information is required when archived datasets may be updated post-publication.

De-identification methods should be explained to balance privacy with analytical usefulness.

Code and environment notes help secondary analysts validate findings more efficiently.

Data statements should specify repository path, access conditions, and request governance details.

Controlled-access datasets must document review criteria and expected response timelines.

Versioning information is required when archived datasets may be updated post-publication.

De-identification methods should be explained to balance privacy with analytical usefulness.

Code and environment notes help secondary analysts validate findings more efficiently.

Data statements should specify repository path, access conditions, and request governance details.

Controlled-access datasets must document review criteria and expected response timelines.

Versioning information is required when archived datasets may be updated post-publication.

De-identification methods should be explained to balance privacy with analytical usefulness.

Code and environment notes help secondary analysts validate findings more efficiently.

Data statements should specify repository path, access conditions, and request governance details.

Controlled-access datasets must document review criteria and expected response timelines.

Versioning information is required when archived datasets may be updated post-publication.

De-identification methods should be explained to balance privacy with analytical usefulness.

Code and environment notes help secondary analysts validate findings more efficiently.

Data statements should specify repository path, access conditions, and request governance details.

Controlled-access datasets must document review criteria and expected response timelines.

Versioning information is required when archived datasets may be updated post-publication.

De-identification methods should be explained to balance privacy with analytical usefulness.

Code and environment notes help secondary analysts validate findings more efficiently.

Submit with Strong Data Transparency

Prepare data and code statements early to strengthen review confidence and publication efficiency.

Editorial office: [email protected]