Health Service Journal

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Health Service Journal  
Discipline Medicine
Language English
Edited by Alastair McLellan
Publication details
Publisher EMAP (United Kingdom)
Frequency Weekly
Indexing
ISSN 0952-2271
Links

Health Service Journal (HSJ) is a weekly news print title and website on the British National Health Service, healthcare management and health policy.

History

The Poor Law Officers' Journal was established in 1892. In 1930 it changed its name after the passing of the Local Government Act 1929 to the Public Assistance Journal and Health and Hospital Review[1] and became the Health Service Journal in 1986.

Management

Commercially published by EMAP, HSJ shares a news team with Nursing Times, and the Local Government Chronicle and has an average circulation of almost 18,000 copies, most of which is by subscription.[2] It is aimed at "Healthcare Leaders" and is widely read among managers in the NHS in England. Its coverage of Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland is rudimentary, and there is very little coverage of commercial healthcare or social care.

HSJ.co.uk is the magazine's subscription-only website. The website expands on the printed content with extra news, analysis, opinion and debate. Subscribers can add to the debate by contributing comments to news stories. The magazine recently launched its own phone app. Opinion and resource centre articles are free to view but news articles are generally behind a pay wall. There is also a dedicated jobs site for positions across the health service including executive-level, governance, information technology, finance, education and commissioning roles.

HSJ runs conferences that cover issues in healthcare management, delivering practical guidance and topical discussion.

The magazine produces an annual list of the 100 "people with the greatest influence on health policy and the NHS."[3]

References

  1. "Reform of the National Health Service Chronology". Socialist Health Association. Retrieved 15 December 2013. 
  2. "ABC Business Magazines Standard certificate of circulation for the 50 issues between 1 July 2007 and 30 June 2008" (pdf). ABC Business Magazines. 2008-08-21. Retrieved 2008-09-04. 
  3. "HSJ100 2013 The annual list of the most influential people in health". Health Service Journal. 11 December 2013. Retrieved 14 December 2013. 

External links


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