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JMIR Public Health and Surveillance

A multidisciplinary journal that focuses on the intersection of public health and technology, public health informatics, mass media campaigns, surveillance, participatory epidemiology, and innovation in public health practice and research.

Editor-in-Chief:

Travis Sanchez, DVM, MPH, Emory University Rollins School of Public Health, USA


Impact Factor 3.9 CiteScore 6.3

JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (JPHS, Editor-in-chief: Travis Sanchez, Emory University/Rollins School of Public Health) is a top-ranked (Q1) Clarivate (SCIE, SSCI etc), ScopusPubMed, PubMed CentralMEDLINE, Sherpa/Romeo, DOAJ, Embase, CABI, and EBSCO/EBSCO essentials indexed, peer-reviewed international multidisciplinary journal with a unique focus on the intersection of innovation and technology in public health, and includes topics like public health informatics, surveillance (surveillance systems and rapid reports), participatory epidemiology, infodemiology and infoveillance, digital disease detection, digital epidemiology, electronic public health interventions, mass media/social media campaigns, health communication, and emerging population health analysis systems and tools. 

JMIR Public Health and Surveillance received a Journal Impact Factor of 3.9ranked Q1 #59/419 journals in the category Public, Environmental & Occupational Health (Journal Citation Reports 2025 from Clarivate).

JMIR Public Health and Surveillance received a Scopus CiteScore of 6.3 (2024), placing it in the 84th percentile (#110/687) as a Q1 journal in the field of Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health.

JPHS has an international author- and readership and welcomes submissions from around the world.

We publish regular articles, reviews, protocols/system descriptions and viewpoint papers on all aspects of public health, with a focus on innovation and technology in public health. The main themes/topics covered by this journal can be found here.

Apart from publishing traditional public health research and viewpoint papers as well as reports from traditional surveillance systems, JPH was one of the first (if not the only) peer-reviewed journals to publish papers with surveillance or pharmacovigilance data from non-traditional, unstructured big data and text sources such as social media and the Internet (infoveillance, digital disease detection), or reports on novel participatory epidemiology projects, where observations are solicited from the public.  

Among other innovations, JPHS is also dedicated to support rapid open data sharing and rapid open access to surveillance and outbreak data. As one of the novel features we plan to publish rapid or even real-time surveillance reports and open data. The methods and description of the surveillance system may be peer-reviewed and published only once in detail, in a  "baseline report" (in a JMIR Res Protoc or a JMIR Public Health & Surveill paper), and authors then have the possibility to publish data and reports in frequent intervals rapidly and with only minimal additional peer-review (we call this article type "Rapid Surveillance Reports"). JMIR Publications may even work with authors/researchers and developers of selected surveillance systems on APIs for semi-automated reports (e.g. weekly reports to be automatically published in JPHS and indexed in PubMed, based on data-feeds from surveillance systems and minimal narratives and abstracts).

Furthermore, during epidemics and public health emergencies, submissions with critical data will be processed with expedited peer-review to enable publication within days or even in real-time.

We also publish descriptions of open data resources and open source software. Where possible, we can and want to publish or even host the actual software or dataset on the journal website.

Recent Articles

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Infectious Diseases (non-STD/STI)

Non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) such as mask-wearing and social distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic significantly reduced the transmission of common respiratory viruses, including influenza and RSV. As NPIs were lifted, concerns emerged about “immunity debt”, which suggests that limited natural exposure to pathogens may have increased susceptibility and severity, particularly among young children. Despite growing attention, however, the post-pandemic impact of NPIs on epidemiologic patterns and shifts in age-specific disease burden remains underexplored.

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Cross-Sectional Studies in Public Health

The maintenance of public health behaviors stands as a critical issue within the realm of public health. COVID-19, a major global emergency, has profoundly impacted the sustainability of public health behaviors. However, there is currently a gap of empirical studies examining the status and influencing mechanisms of public health behavior maintenance after the pandemic, especially those adopting a multi-factorial and integrated approach.

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Reviews on Public Health Technology and Innovation

Post COVID-19 condition presents complex symptomatology involving multifaceted interactions, which has resulted in a current lack of comprehensive understanding of its disease trajectory. This knowledge gap significantly compromises the efficiency of symptom management and adversely affects patients' quality of life.

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Protocols for Public Health Research and Surveillance

Unintentional injury is a leading cause of childhood morbidity and mortality worldwide. In China, real-world implementation of child injury prevention efforts remains inadequate due to constrained workforce capacity and a lack of operational frameworks.

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Instruments and Questionnaires for Physical Activity and Lifestyle

Caring for individuals with rare diseases (RDs) presents unique challenges that can significantly impact caregivers’ quality of life (QoL). The WHO Quality of Life-BREF is a widely used tool for assessing QoL across different populations.

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Equity and Digital Divide

People with opioid use disorder (OUD) have the highest rates of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. Despite the availability of curative HCV medication, people with OUD have limited healthcare access largely due to stigma. In a recent, pragmatic, randomized controlled trial (RCT), we compared a facilitated telemedicine intervention for HCV treatment integrated into opioid treatment programs to offsite referral. Facilitated telemedicine is bidirectional videoconferencing between a remote provider and a patient, supported by a case manager who facilitates the telemedicine encounter. The case manager schedules telemedicine visits, provides appointment reminders and operates the digital equipment. Among 602 participants in the RCT, 90% were cured through facilitated telemedicine and 39% were cured through offsite referral. In this work, a multidisciplinary group of investigators, who directed the RCT, conducted a workshop, “Advancing Viral Hepatitis Screening and Treatment in Opioid Treatment Settings – Models & Resources”, at the American Association for Treatment of Opioid Dependence Conference in May 2024 to disseminate knowledge of facilitated telemedicine, including implementation considerations. We highlighted facilitated telemedicine as a patient-centered, sociotechnical, pragmatic healthcare delivery model for underserved populations.

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Influenza and Influenza-Like-Illness (ILI) Surveillance

Influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) predominantly circulate during the winter season and cause acute respiratory infections (ARI). Deploying molecular point-of-care testing (POCT) in primary care at can inform whether a patient presenting with an ARI has influenza or RSV. An early virological diagnosis, could facilitate appropriate use of antivirals and enable better antimicrobial stewardship.

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Public Health Informatics

  The 2003 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), caused by a novel coronavirus, heavily impacted Taiwan's healthcare system, triggering clinical crises and lasting effects among affected individuals and families. The first case in Taiwan was identified on February 25, 2003, and the final case reported on June 15, 2003. During the epidemic, 346 people were diagnosed with SARS, leading to 37 deaths. Outbreaks also occurred in China, Singapore, and Toronto, Canada, showing the vulnerability of global health systems to new zoonotic diseases. Clinically, SARS caused high fever and severe lung inflammation. Survivors often had long-term lung problems, including fibrosis, and bone issues like osteonecrosis, mostly due to high-dose steroid treatment. Although studies have looked at long-term outcomes-especially lung and bone issues-none followed patients beyond seven years. The COVID-19 pandemic further revealed gaps in understanding how serious viral infections affect wider health areas, including unintentional and intentional injuries. Data on related hospitalizations also remain limited.

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HIV/AIDS/STI Prevention and Care

In Brazil, Men Who Have Sex with Men (MSM) are disproportionately affected by the HIV epidemic, mirroring global trends. Despite advancements in HIV prevention, such as Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP), uptake remains uneven among different MSM age groups, influenced by various sexual behaviors, risk perceptions, and social stigmas.

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Cross-Sectional Studies in Public Health

Avoidable hospitalizations (AHs) have been widely used in developed countries as a proxy indicator for the quality of primary care. However, it is rarely evaluated in developing countries such as China. Studies examining changes in AHs before and during the COVID-19 pandemic are also limited. The appropriateness of AHs as an indicator measuring primary care quality under pandemic conditions has not been well discussed.

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Hygiene and Infection Prevention

Influenza vaccination coverage is commonly suboptimal. However, the COVID-19 pandemic and consequent high exposure to health information may have changed population attitudes towards this vaccination.

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