The IJHPR’s growing scientific impact

Abstract The Israel Journal of Health Policy Research (IJHPR) was launched in 2012, with a mission that included fostering intensive intellectual interactions among health policy scholars in Israel and abroad. Now, as the journal approaches the end of its seventh year of publication, we can all be p...

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Main Authors: Bruce Rosen, Stephen C. Schoenbaum, Avi Israeli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-12-01
Series:Israel Journal of Health Policy Research
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13584-018-0269-1
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spelling doaj-ac51984150b744b586937ee68e075fc92020-11-25T03:04:11ZengBMCIsrael Journal of Health Policy Research2045-40152018-12-01711410.1186/s13584-018-0269-1The IJHPR’s growing scientific impactBruce Rosen0Stephen C. Schoenbaum1Avi Israeli2Myers-JDC-Brookdale InstituteJosiah Macy Jr. FoundationHadassah – Hebrew University Medical SchoolAbstract The Israel Journal of Health Policy Research (IJHPR) was launched in 2012, with a mission that included fostering intensive intellectual interactions among health policy scholars in Israel and abroad. Now, as the journal approaches the end of its seventh year of publication, we can all be proud that this component of our mission is increasingly being realized. As of the end of November 2018, the Web of Science included 404 articles published by the IJHPR. These IJHPR articles had generated 1023 citations via 847 citing articles. Just over 70% of those citing articles were in journals other than the IJHPR, with the vast majority of those being in non-Israeli journals. The authors of the citing articles were most often based in institutions in the US (35%), Israel (33%), England (9%) or Canada (7%). Looking to the future, we hope that the IJHPR will receive even more submissions from authors based in Israel or other countries that are well-designed data-based studies; thoughtful, comprehensive policy analyses; or important integrations of a body of knowledge. In all instances, these should be relevant to Israeli health policy and health care. We hope that many, ideally most, will also be relevant to scholars, policymakers and professionals in other countries.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13584-018-0269-1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bruce Rosen
Stephen C. Schoenbaum
Avi Israeli
spellingShingle Bruce Rosen
Stephen C. Schoenbaum
Avi Israeli
The IJHPR’s growing scientific impact
Israel Journal of Health Policy Research
author_facet Bruce Rosen
Stephen C. Schoenbaum
Avi Israeli
author_sort Bruce Rosen
title The IJHPR’s growing scientific impact
title_short The IJHPR’s growing scientific impact
title_full The IJHPR’s growing scientific impact
title_fullStr The IJHPR’s growing scientific impact
title_full_unstemmed The IJHPR’s growing scientific impact
title_sort ijhpr’s growing scientific impact
publisher BMC
series Israel Journal of Health Policy Research
issn 2045-4015
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Abstract The Israel Journal of Health Policy Research (IJHPR) was launched in 2012, with a mission that included fostering intensive intellectual interactions among health policy scholars in Israel and abroad. Now, as the journal approaches the end of its seventh year of publication, we can all be proud that this component of our mission is increasingly being realized. As of the end of November 2018, the Web of Science included 404 articles published by the IJHPR. These IJHPR articles had generated 1023 citations via 847 citing articles. Just over 70% of those citing articles were in journals other than the IJHPR, with the vast majority of those being in non-Israeli journals. The authors of the citing articles were most often based in institutions in the US (35%), Israel (33%), England (9%) or Canada (7%). Looking to the future, we hope that the IJHPR will receive even more submissions from authors based in Israel or other countries that are well-designed data-based studies; thoughtful, comprehensive policy analyses; or important integrations of a body of knowledge. In all instances, these should be relevant to Israeli health policy and health care. We hope that many, ideally most, will also be relevant to scholars, policymakers and professionals in other countries.
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13584-018-0269-1
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