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The Journal of Communication in Healthcare: Strategies, Media, and Engagement in Global Health is a quarterly peer-reviewed healthcare journal covering the field of health communication across the intersecting fields of healthcare, public health, global health, and medicine.
Health Services Management Research; Human Resources for Health; Journal for Healthcare Quality; Journal of Healthcare Management; Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics; Journal of Medical Marketing
Health Communication is a peer-reviewed academic journal covering health communication. It was established in 1989 and is published eight times per year by Taylor & Francis . The editor-in-chief is Teresa L. Thompson ( University of Dayton ).
QJM: An International Journal of Medicine: Medicine: Oxford University Press: English: 1907–present Radiology: Radiology: Radiological Society of North America: English: 1923–present Rambam Maimonides Medical Journal: Medicine: Rambam Health Care Campus: English: 2010–present Rejuvenation Research: Aging: Mary Ann Liebert: English: 1998 ...
The editor-in-chief is Scott C. Ratzan (distinguished lecturer at CUNY Graduate School of Public Health & Health Policy). Special projects editor is Kenneth H. Rabin (senior scholar at CUNY Graduate School of Public Health & Health Policy). [1] The Journal of Health Communication an impact factor of 4.4 with over 417,000 annual downloads. [2]
Medical Humanities is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal covering the field of medical humanities. [1] The journal presents the international conversation around medicine and its engagement with the humanities and arts, social sciences, health policy, medical education, patient experience, and the public at large.
Richard Smith, the former editor of the medical journal the BMJ, has been critical of many of the aspects of modern-day medical journal publishing. [5] [12] Critics of medical publishing have argued that problems related to gaming of citation and authorship are prevalent in the field, as many authors did not actually contribute to the articles that their names are on, many contributors to the ...
The rhetoric of health and medicine is tied to the emergence of rhetoric of science in the early 1970s and 1980s. [10] Contemporary theorists such as Kenneth Burke, Michel Foucault, Thomas Kuhn, Bruno Latour, and Steve Woolgar laid the theoretical groundwork for this early interest in the persuasive dimensions of scientific language.