ISSN: 1069-6563
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Academic Emergency Medicine Q1 Unclaimed
Academic Emergency Medicine is a journal indexed in SJR in Medicine (miscellaneous) and Emergency Medicine with an H index of 142. It has a price of 2500 €. It has an SJR impact factor of 1,279 and it has a best quartile of Q1. It is published in English. It has an SJR impact factor of 1,279.
Academic Emergency Medicine focuses its scope in these topics and keywords: emergency, department, health, patients, controlled, care, tomography, decision, evidence, medicine, ...
Type: Journal
Type of Copyright:
Languages: English
Open Access Policy:
Type of publications:
Publication frecuency: -
2500 €
Inmediate OANPD
Embargoed OA0 €
Non OAMetrics
1,279
SJR Impact factor142
H Index223
Total Docs (Last Year)685
Total Docs (3 years)5337
Total Refs1618
Total Cites (3 years)412
Citable Docs (3 years)2.11
Cites/Doc (2 years)23.93
Ref/DocOther journals with similar parameters
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Journal of Experimental Medicine Q1
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Aims and Scope
Best articles by citations
Efficacy of an Educational Web Site for Educating Physicians about Bioterrorism
View moreUse of Mobile Apps: A Patient-centered Approach
View moreCircadian Pattern of Ambulance Use for Children in a Japanese City
View moreFaculty Development: The Educator's Portfolio: Its Preparation, Uses, and Value in Academic Medicine
View moreWhen a Faculty Member Dies or Becomes Disabled
View moreProxy Identification: A Time-dependent Analysis
View moreShould We Screen for Depression in the Emergency Department?
View moreEvolution of an Emergency Department Screening Questionnaire for Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
View moreTRISS: Does It Get Better than This?
View moreBiological Fallacy
View moreBiological Fallacy - In Reply
View moreAn Evaluation of Emergency Medicine Resident Interaction Time with Faculty in Different Teaching Venues
View moreXanthochromia is not pathognomonic for subarachnoid hemorrhage
View moreLeaving Against Medical Advice after Out-of-hospital Naloxone: A Closer Look is Needed
View moreClinicopathological Conference: Fever, Productive Cough, and Tachycardia in a 22-year-old Asian Male
View moreLeaving Against Medical Advice after Out-of-hospital Naloxone: A Closer Look is Needed - In reply
View moreThe Validity of Emergency Department Triage Blood Pressure Measurements
View moreSeptic Arthritis of the Ankle from Fusobacterium necrophorum
View moreCrash Course in Decision Making
View moreQualitative Approaches to the Study of Adverse Events and Near Misses
View moreThe Next Frontier: Medical Student Education
View moreInsurance Status and the Treatment of Myocardial Infarction at Academic Centers
View moreUncovering Heart Failure in Patients with a History of Pulmonary Disease: Rationale for the Early Use of B-type Natriuretic Peptide in the Emergency Department
View moreInteractions between Emergency Medicine Programs and the Pharmaceutical Industry
View more
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