Hubbry Logo
search
logo

JAMA Network Open

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia
JAMA Network Open
DisciplineMedicine
LanguageEnglish
Edited byEli Perencevich
Publication details
History2018-present
Publisher
FrequencyMonthly
Yes
LicenseCC BY, CC BY-NC-ND
13.353 (2021)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4JAMA Netw. Open
Indexing
ISSN2574-3805
LCCN2017201880
OCLC no.1001466479
Links

JAMA Network Open is a monthly open access medical journal published by the American Medical Association covering all aspects of the biomedical sciences. It was established in 2018 and the founding editor-in-chief was Fred Rivara (University of Washington); since 2024, Eli Perencevich (University of Iowa) has been editor-in-chief.[1] The journal is funded by article processing charges and most articles are available under a Creative Commons license. Article titles and abstracts are translated into Spanish and Chinese. According to Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2021 impact factor of 13.353, ranking it 15th out of 172 journals in the category "Medicine, General & Internal". Additionally, it ranks 5th among purely open access journals in that subject category. [2]

Abstracting and indexing

[edit]

The journal is abstracted and indexed in CINAHL,[3] Emerging Sources Citation Index,[4] and Index Medicus/MEDLINE/PubMed.[5]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
JAMA Network Open is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access general medical journal published by the American Medical Association (AMA).[1] Launched in May 2018, it publishes original research, consensus statements, and research letters on topics including clinical care, health policy, and global health across all medical disciplines and countries.[2][1] The journal's mission is to improve health, health care, and health equity worldwide through the open-access dissemination of timely, high-quality, and impactful research aimed at clinicians, investigators, policy makers, and other health professionals.[3] As part of the broader JAMA Network family of 13 peer-reviewed journals, it operates as an online-only publication with continuous article releases rather than fixed issues.[4][1] JAMA Network Open emphasizes rigorous peer review following International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) guidelines and requires adherence to reporting standards such as those from the EQUATOR Network for clinical trials and observational studies.[1] It excludes non-research content like case reports, animal studies, and unsolicited opinion pieces to maintain a focus on novel, human-based research contributions.[1] Under the editorship of Eli N. Perencevich, MD, MS, the journal has achieved a 2024 Journal Impact Factor of 10.5, positioning it as one of the leading large-volume open-access general medical journals.[5][6][7]

Background

Establishment and launch

JAMA Network Open was established by the American Medical Association (AMA) in 2018 as a fully open-access companion journal to the existing JAMA family, created to address the increasing demand for unrestricted access to high-quality medical research in an era of evolving digital publishing and global collaboration.[8] The initiative responded to the research community's need for broader dissemination of peer-reviewed findings without subscription barriers, building on the AMA's longstanding commitment to advancing medical knowledge through its network of journals.[2] The journal's launch was announced in October 2017, with the first publications appearing in May 2018 to provide a dedicated platform for timely, rigorous scientific inquiry across diverse medical disciplines.[9] Its initial goals centered on publishing peer-reviewed original research in biomedical sciences, emphasizing accessibility to enable physicians, researchers, and policymakers worldwide to read, share, and apply evidence-based insights freely.[8] The AMA facilitated this development by integrating the new journal into the JAMA Network's established editorial and technological infrastructure.[2] Volume 1, Issue 1 of JAMA Network Open was published on May 18, 2018, featuring a selection of original research articles that exemplified the journal's broad scope, including studies on clinical interventions, health outcomes, and methodological advancements in medicine.[8] This inaugural release marked the journal's commitment to weekly online publication of high-impact, multidisciplinary content from over 40 medical and health subject areas.[2]

Publisher

The JAMA Network Open is published by the American Medical Association (AMA), a professional association for physicians founded in 1847 to promote scientific advancement and public health in the United States.[10] The AMA operates through its publishing division, the JAMA Network, which manages a portfolio of peer-reviewed medical journals including the flagship JAMA—first published in 1883—as well as JAMA Network Open and 11 specialty journals covering areas such as cardiology, dermatology, neurology, oncology, pediatrics, psychiatry, and surgery.[11][12][13] In its role as publisher, the AMA provides comprehensive editorial oversight, production services, and global distribution for JAMA Network Open, while funding journal operations primarily through article processing charges (APCs) levied on accepted manuscripts under its open access model.[1] The AMA's expansion into open access publishing, exemplified by the 2018 launch of JAMA Network Open, reflects its ongoing adaptation to contemporary demands for broader accessibility to medical research.[2]

Content and scope

Topics covered

JAMA Network Open maintains a broad multidisciplinary scope, encompassing all aspects of the biomedical sciences with a primary focus on clinical care, innovations in health care, health policy, and global health.[1] The journal publishes original research across more than 40 health disciplines, targeting clinicians, investigators, policy makers, and readers interested in advancing medical knowledge and practice.[9] Key areas of coverage include original investigations in fields such as cardiology (encompassing hypertension and stroke), diabetes and endocrinology, neurology (including Alzheimer's disease), oncology, public health, and epidemiology, among others like anesthesiology, dermatology, genetics, infectious diseases, nephrology, pediatrics, psychiatry, and surgery.[9] These topics emphasize high-quality, impactful research that addresses pressing health challenges through rigorous methodologies, such as clinical trials, cohort studies, and meta-analyses.[1] The journal places a strong global emphasis, welcoming submissions from all countries and health disciplines to promote research on diverse populations and international health issues, thereby fostering a worldwide perspective on medical advancements.[1] As a primarily research-oriented publication, JAMA Network Open excludes case reports, animal preclinical studies, narrative reviews, and unsolicited opinion pieces, with non-research content like invited commentaries handled separately; original investigations form the core of its content delivery.[1]

Article types

JAMA Network Open publishes a variety of manuscript formats, emphasizing rigorous, peer-reviewed contributions that advance medical knowledge and clinical practice.[1] The journal accepts original research articles, opinion pieces, and review formats, all of which undergo a single-anonymized peer review process to ensure methodological rigor and relevance to clinical care.[1] Original research constitutes the core of the journal's content, primarily through Original Investigations, which are structured reports of novel studies such as clinical trials, observational studies (e.g., cohort, case-control, or cross-sectional designs), and diagnostic or prognostic analyses.[1] These manuscripts are limited to 3000 words, with up to 5 tables or figures and 50-75 references, and must include a structured abstract of 250-300 words along with Key Points summarizing the question, findings, and meaning.[1] Brief Reports, a shorter variant for preliminary or smaller-scale studies, follow similar guidelines but are capped at 600 words with fewer supplementary elements.[1] Multimedia supplements, such as videos or interactive graphics, are encouraged for Original Investigations to present complex data effectively.[1] Other article types include Invited Commentaries, which provide expert analysis of published research or timely issues, typically 1000-1500 words and solicited by the editors.[1] Viewpoints offer concise opinions on policy, practice, or emerging challenges in medicine, limited to 1200 words without abstracts or references exceeding 15.[1] Research Letters present preliminary or novel findings succinctly, at 600 words or less with no abstract, up to 6 references, and at most 2 tables or figures.[1] For syntheses of evidence, the journal accepts Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses, which critically evaluate existing literature (with or without statistical pooling) in up to 3000 words, adhering to PRISMA guidelines and including structured abstracts.[1] Consensus Statements from expert panels are also published, following similar formatting to reviews.[1] All submissions require adherence to EQUATOR Network reporting guidelines for transparency and reproducibility, with structured abstracts mandatory for research and review articles to outline objectives, methods, results, and conclusions.[1][14] This diverse array of formats ensures broad coverage of evidence-based insights across clinical disciplines.[1]

Editorial team

Editor-in-chief

The founding Editor-in-Chief of JAMA Network Open was Frederick P. Rivara, M.D., M.P.H., a professor of pediatrics at the University of Washington School of Medicine.[2][15] He served in this role from the journal's launch in 2018 until June 30, 2024, during which he prioritized rigorous peer review, statistical oversight, and the dissemination of high-quality research to build the journal's international reputation.[15] The current Editor-in-Chief is Eli N. Perencevich, M.D., M.S., appointed effective July 1, 2024, and affiliated with the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, where he serves as associate chair for clinical and health services research and director of the Center for Access & Delivery Research and Evaluation at the Iowa City VA Medical Center.[7][15] Perencevich, who previously held the position of associate editor since the journal's inception, emphasizes expanding JAMA Network Open as a multidisciplinary platform for clinicians, investigators, and policymakers to advance global accessibility of high-impact medical science.[7][15] The Editor-in-Chief oversees all editorial decisions, including final manuscript acceptance following peer review, and manages the journal's strategic direction to ensure alignment with the standards of the American Medical Association (AMA).[1][15] This leadership role involves guiding the peer-review process, handling appeals on a case-by-case basis, and fostering collaboration with the broader editorial board to maintain editorial integrity.[1] Editors-in-Chief are appointed by the JAMA Network, under the auspices of the AMA, through a selection process that evaluates candidates' expertise in clinical medicine, research, and scientific publishing.[7][16]

Editorial board

The editorial board of JAMA Network Open comprises an executive deputy editor (Stephan D. Fihn, MD, MPH, University of Washington), deputy editors, statistical editors, associate editors, a digital media editor, an AI editor, and a broader editorial board of advisors, supporting the journal's mission to disseminate high-quality medical research.[3] This structure includes three deputy editors specializing in fields such as internal medicine and health policy (Elizabeth A. Jacobs, Tufts University School of Medicine), emergency medicine and substance use disorders (Howard S. Kim, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine), and pediatrics (Beth A. Tarini, Children's National Hospital).[3] Statistical editors, including Jesse A. Berlin (Rutgers University) and Karla Hemming (University of Birmingham, UK), provide expertise in biostatistics and epidemiology.[3] Associate editors, numbering around 20, specialize in key areas such as cardiology (e.g., Suzanne V. Arnold, University of Missouri), oncology (e.g., Fumiko Chino, MD Anderson Cancer Center), and global health, drawing from diverse institutions across the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and other countries to cover a wide range of medical disciplines.[3] The editorial board itself consists of approximately eight senior advisors from varied settings, including L. Ebony Boulware (Wake Forest University School of Medicine) and Steven M. Bradley (Allina Health, Minneapolis).[3] The editorial teams of the JAMA Network, including JAMA Network Open, exhibit diversity as of January 2024 in gender (44% women among respondents), race and ethnicity (11% Black, 7% Hispanic or Latino/a/x, 18% Asian or Pacific Islander), and geographic ancestry spanning Western Europe (43%), Eastern Europe (25%), and regions in Africa and Asia, ensuring multifaceted perspectives on global health issues.[17] Board members are responsible for assigning manuscripts to appropriate editors, selecting and managing peer reviewers, and resolving conflicts of interest through a formal recusal process that assigns decisions to impartial colleagues.[1] They convene regularly to offer guidance on editorial policies and updates, aligning with the Editor-in-Chief's strategic direction.[6] A key feature is the commitment to transparency, including biannual public disclosure of editorial demographics to promote equity and explicit reporting of conflicts of interest in line with ICMJE guidelines.[17][1]

Publishing details

Frequency and format

JAMA Network Open publishes monthly issues, with accepted articles made available continuously online ahead of print to facilitate timely dissemination of research.[18][1] The journal operates on a digital-first, fully online model, with articles accessible in HTML, PDF, and XML formats to support diverse reading and integration needs. It incorporates multimedia elements, including videos (limited to 5 minutes and 25 MB in MP4 format) and podcasts (limited to 5 minutes and 25 MB in MP3 format), enhancing the presentation of complex findings. The online ISSN is 2574-3805. Primarily published in English, the journal aims to broaden global accessibility through its open access model.[1][18]

Open access model

JAMA Network Open operates under a gold open access model, making all accepted research articles freely available on the journal's website immediately upon publication without any embargo period.[1] The journal is funded primarily through article processing charges (APCs), which are set at $4000 per article. Waivers or discounts on these charges are available for eligible authors from low- and middle-income countries designated under the Hinari Core Offer program, which supports access to research resources in resource-limited settings.[1] Authors can choose from two Creative Commons licensing options depending on the funding source of their research: the CC BY license, which permits broad reuse including commercial use as long as proper attribution is provided, for not-for-profit, government-funded, or unfunded work; or the CC BY-NC-ND license, which prohibits commercial use and derivative works but allows non-commercial sharing with attribution, for commercially funded research.[1] This open access approach enhances the journal's global reach, evidenced by 232,808 recipients of its weekly electronic table of contents as of 2024, facilitating widespread dissemination among clinicians, researchers, and policymakers worldwide.[6]

Metrics and recognition

Impact factor and rankings

JAMA Network Open's Journal Impact Factor (JIF), as calculated by Clarivate, has demonstrated notable variation since its inception, serving as a key indicator of its citation influence in recent articles published in the preceding two years. The journal achieved a JIF of 13.353 in 2021, rising to 13.8 in 2022, before declining to 10.5 in 2023 and 9.7 in 2024.[19][20][21][22] In terms of rankings, the journal placed 15th out of 172 journals in the "Medicine, General & Internal" category according to the 2021 Journal Citation Reports, underscoring its strong position among general medical publications. It ranked 5th among open access journals in this category in 2021, highlighting its prominence in the open access landscape. Additionally, its SCImago Journal Rank (SJR) stood at 3.546 in 2024, placing it in the Q1 quartile for medicine (miscellaneous). In more recent Journal Citation Reports, it maintains a high percentile rank of approximately 95.8% in the "Medicine, General & Internal" category as of 2024.[19][23][24] Other bibliometric indicators further illustrate the journal's influence, including an h-index of 154 in 2024, which measures the number of articles cited at least that many times. The average citations per article hover around 13.4, reflecting robust engagement with its content. A research impact score of 33.4 complements these metrics, emphasizing sustained scholarly attention.[23][25] Since its launch in 2018, JAMA Network Open has exhibited steady growth in impact metrics, transitioning from an emerging open access venue to one of rising prestige in medical publishing, with consistent high rankings and citation trends signaling increasing recognition.[6][2]

Abstracting and indexing

JAMA Network Open is indexed in several major bibliographic databases, ensuring broad discoverability of its content across medical, scientific, and open access platforms. Primary indexing services include PubMed/MEDLINE, which covers the journal from its inception in 2018, providing comprehensive access to biomedical literature for researchers and clinicians worldwide.[26] Similarly, the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE) includes the journal with full coverage achieved by 2020, facilitating citation tracking and integration into Web of Science analyses.[27] Scopus, a multidisciplinary abstract and citation database, also indexes the journal, supporting detailed bibliometric evaluations and cross-disciplinary searches.[23] Google Scholar provides open indexing of its articles, enabling easy discovery through general academic searches. Additionally, inclusion in the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) highlights its commitment to open access standards, listing all articles since 2018.[28] Further indexing in specialized databases enhances visibility in targeted fields. The Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) covers JAMA Network Open starting from January 2019, making its content accessible to nursing and allied health professionals.[29] Journal Citation Reports (JCR), part of Clarivate's ecosystem, tracks the journal's performance metrics, aiding in assessments of its scholarly influence. These indexing services collectively ensure that the journal's research on clinical care, health policy, and global health reaches a global audience through established academic search infrastructures, promoting wider dissemination and application of findings.[27]
User Avatar
No comments yet.