Journal of Medical Internet Research

Journal of Medical Internet Research  
Abbreviated title (ISO 4)
J. Med. Internet Res.
Discipline Medicine, eHealth
Language English
Edited by Gunther Eysenbach
Publication details
Publisher
JMIR Publications
Publication history
1999-present
Frequency Upon acceptance (issues aggregated monthly)
Yes
License Creative Commons Attribution 2.0
5.175
Indexing
ISSN 1438-8871
LCCN 00252482
OCLC no. 42705591
Links

The Journal of Medical Internet Research is a peer-reviewed open-access medical journal established in 1999 covering eHealth and "healthcare in the Internet age". The editor-in-chief is Gunther Eysenbach. According to the Journal Citation Reports the journal has a 2016 impact factor of 5.175, ranking it first out of 22 journals in the category "Medical Informatics"[1] and 4th out of 90 journals in the category "Health Care Sciences & Services".[2] The journal was incorporated as JMIR Publications in 2011 and was a cofounder of the Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association. Shortly after incorporation, several sister journals were launched, focusing on specific subtopics within eHealth, such as mHealth, serious games, mental health, and cancer.

Controversy

JMIR Publications has faced criticism for initially using the same editorial board of its main journal for its sister journals and for offering a fast-track review pathway for a surcharge.[3] Eysenbach commented that the spin-off journals would eventually have their own boards and that the fast-track option does not affect the quality or integrity of its peer-review processes.[4][5] As of the end of 2016, all journals had their own editorial boards.

Ranking of JMIR Publications journals

JMIR Publications publishes over 20 journals, including some society journals.

According to a survey among 398 health informatics experts in 2015 to rank the leading journals in the field of health informatics the Journal of Medical Internet Research was ranked as a top tier journal. Its 2 sister journals JMIR Medical Informatics and JMIR mHealth and uHealth were ranked in the top 20%.[6]

JMIR mHealth and uHealth received its inaugural impact factor in June 2017 of 4.636.

References

  1. "Journals Ranked by Impact: Medical Informatics". 2015 Journal Citation Reports. Web of Science (Science ed.). Thomson Reuters. 2016.
  2. "Journals Ranked by Impact: Health Care Sciences & Services". 2015 Journal Citation Reports. Web of Science (Science ed.). Thomson Reuters. 2017.
  3. Beall, Jeffrey. "JMIR Publications: A Model for Open-Access Health Sciences Publishers? (withdrawn/unpublished)". Scholarly Open Access. Archived from the original on 2015-12-25. Retrieved 2015-12-22.
  4. Eysenbach, Gunther. "Response by JMIR Publications to Jeffrey Beall's Blog Post". Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  5. Eysenbach, Gunther. "Gunther Eysenbach's random research rants: JMIR's Fast-Track Experiment (Innovations in Scholarly Publishing: Part 1)". Gunther Eysenbach.
  6. Dohan, Michael S; Serenko, Alexander; Tan, Joseph (2015). "The Expert Survey-Based Global Ranking of Management- and Clinical-Centered Health Informatics and IT Journals". Transactions of the International Conference on Health Information Technology Advancement. 3 (1): 151–161.
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