JMIR Publications journals that are indexed or approved for indexing:
- Journal of Medical Internet Research
- JMIR mHealth and uHealth (approved July 1st, 2018)
- JMIR Research Protocols (approved October 9, 2019)
- JMIR Human Factors (approved Jan 11, 2020)
- JMIR Mental Health (approved March 1, 2020)
- JMIR Serious Games (approved May 1, 2020)
- JMIR Medical Informatics (approved May 1, 2020)
- JMIR Formative Research (approved May 1, 2020)
- Journal of Participatory Medicine (approved May 1, 2020)
- JMIR Diabetes (approved May 12, 2020)
- JMIR Cancer (approved May 12, 2020)
- JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting (approved May 12, 2020)
- JMIR Medical Education (approved May 12, 2020)
- JMIR Aging (approved May 12, 2020)
- JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies (approved May 12, 2020)
- JMIR Cardio (approved May 12, 2020)
- JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (approved May 12, 2020)
- JMIR Dermatology (approved February 15, 2022)
- JMIR Infodemiology (approved November 4, 2022)
- JMIR Bioinformatics and Biotechnology (approved August 25, 2023)
- JMIR Nursing (approved September 12, 2023)
- JMIR Perioperative Medicine (approved October 30, 2023)
- Asian/Pacific Island Nursing Journal (approved August, 29, 2023)
- Online Journal of Public Health Informatics (approved November 23, 2023)
- JMIR AI (approved January 29, 2025)
- JMIR Biomedical Engineering (approved March 02, 2025)
- JMIR Neurotechnology (approved May 5, 2025)
CiteScore
To find the updated CiteScore for a journal, please visit this announcement for the latest CiteScores. Also, you can find them on each journal homepage or search on the Scopus website.
Although CiteScore is one citation-based approach to measuring impact, JMIR Publications discourages authors and research users from misusing citation-based metrics of impact. Such measures rely on citation counts for individual articles in a journal, and often do not account for additional features of journals as markers of impact and high quality.
See also: What is Impact Factor misuse?
Articles published in indexed journals missing in Scopus
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Omissions of JMIR Publications journal articles or misattribution can occur. Authors whose article is missing from Scopus should contact Scopus directly using their support center: How do I request to add a missing document?
- Elsevier is solely responsible for the content selection policy of Scopus and its interpretation. Users may direct any concerns about inaccuracies on journal content coverage to Scopus. See their Support Center.
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