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Health Technology Assessment is a weekly peer-reviewed open access medical journal published by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), [1] [2] a research partner of the United Kingdom National Health Service. It publishes research on the evaluations of health technologies, their effectiveness, cost and broader impact. [3]
The National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) is the British government's major funder of clinical, public health, social care and translational research. [3] With a budget of over £1.2 billion in 2020–21, [4] its mission is to "improve the health and wealth of the nation through research". [5]
License must be CC BY-NC. If CC BY, must pay Article Processing Charge for hybrid OA publication. [92] WikiJournal User Group: Unrestricted Unrestricted Unrestricted [93] Wiley: Unrestricted, except: Journal of Orthopaedic Research does not accept clinical research articles that have been shared as preprints. [94] [95] Unrestricted, except:
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Title Primary article Related articles Articles to be created "Experience of children and young people cared for in mental health, learning disability and autism inpatient settings". 2021-06-09.
In December, User:Adam Harangozó (NIHR WiR) joined at the NIHR's Wikimedian in Residence (WiR) on a six-month pilot initiative. [1] The aim is to help the NIHR share information on Wikipedia, improving the coverage of medical topics. Adam will be engaging NIHR staff and users, members of the public, to encourage contributions to Wikipedia.
Only text that is licensed compatibly with the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-SA 4.0) or in the public domain can be freely copied onto Wikipedia (if copyright of the previously published text belongs exclusively to you, it must also be licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) to comply ...
The concept of green open access was coined in 2004 to describe a "mode of publishing in non open access journal but also self archiving it in an open access archive". [4] Different drafts of a paper may be self-archived, such as the internal non-peer-reviewed version, or the peer-reviewed version published in a journal.