ISSN: 1937-5867
Journal Home
Journal Guideline
HERD Q2 Unclaimed
HERD is a journal indexed in SJR in Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health and Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine with an H index of 33. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,632 and it has a best quartile of Q2. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,632.
Type: Journal
Type of Copyright:
Languages:
Open Access Policy:
Type of publications:
Publication frecuency: -
- €
Inmediate OANPD
Embargoed OA- €
Non OAMetrics
0,632
SJR Impact factor33
H Index106
Total Docs (Last Year)242
Total Docs (3 years)4044
Total Refs619
Total Cites (3 years)208
Citable Docs (3 years)2.52
Cites/Doc (2 years)38.15
Ref/DocOther journals with similar parameters
Critical Public Health Q2
International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health Q2
Osong Public Health and Research Perspectives Q2
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health Q2
Journal of Health Services Research and Policy Q2
Compare this journals
Aims and Scope
Best articles by citations
Evidence-Based Design and Research-Informed Design: What's the Difference? Conceptual Definitions and Comparative Analysis
View moreEvidence-Based Design for Healthcare in Post-Katrina New Orleans: Current Dilemmas
View moreEvidence-Based Design: Strong Support and Healthy Skepticism
View moreResearch Agenda for Sustainable Healthcare: A Work in Progress
View moreExploring Managers' Opinions on Planning and Designing Adult Day Care Centers
View moreAffordance-Based Evaluations that Focus on Supporting the Needs of Users
View moreBook Review: A design manual - Hospitals
View moreIntegrated Healthscape Strategies: An Ecological Approach to Evidence-Based Design
View moreThe Impact of Facility Improvements on Hospital Nurses
View moreDelivering Rural Health in a Changing Health Model
View moreThe Role of Daylighting in Skilled Nursing Short-Term Rehabilitation Facilities
View moreInnovation, Architecture, and Quantum Reality: Synthesis in a New Age for Healthcare
View moreInvestigation of Eligible Picture Categories for Use as Environmental Cues in Dementia-Sensitive Environments
View moreThere Is Evidence to Support Design for Health, But Rarely Proof
View moreBuilding Resilience and Organizational Readiness During Healthcare Facility Redevelopment Transitions
View moreDesign of the Physical Environment for Changing Healthcare Needs
View moreWelcome from the Editors of HERD
View moreOrganizational Transformation: A Model for Joint Optimization of Culture Change and Evidence-Based Design
View moreTransforming the Design Process
View moreThe Time Has Come
View moreAttractions to Fuel the Imagination: Reframing Understandings of the Role of Distraction Relative to Well-Being in the Pediatric Hospital
View moreNature! Small steps that can make a big difference
View moreDeveloping the Birth Unit Design Spatial Evaluation Tool (BUDSET) in Australia: A Qualitative Study
View moreWelcome to a Special Issue
View more
Comments