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Equine Veterinary Journal

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Equine Veterinary Journal
TitleEquine Veterinary Journal
DisciplineVeterinary medicine
AbbreviationEquine Vet. J.
History1969–present
FrequencyMonthly

Equine Veterinary Journal is a peer-reviewed periodical concerning medical care and clinical research for horses, ponies, and donkeys. It publishes original research, reviews, case reports, and clinical guidelines relevant to practitioners and researchers associated with institutions such as Royal Veterinary College, University of Nottingham, Cornell University, University of California, Davis, and Royal Agricultural University. Articles often intersect with work conducted at organizations including British Equine Veterinary Association, American Association of Equine Practitioners, European College of Veterinary Surgeons, RSPCA, and World Organisation for Animal Health.

History

The journal was established in 1969 amid developments at institutions like Royal Veterinary College, University of Liverpool, and University of Edinburgh during an era shaped by veterinary advancements associated with figures from Royal Society-affiliated laboratories and clinical programs at Addenbrooke's Hospital and Westminster Hospital Medical School. Early editorial direction reflected priorities seen in contemporaneous publications such as The Veterinary Record and Journal of Small Animal Practice and paralleled research trajectories at Waltham Centre for Pet Nutrition and breeding programs at National Stud (United Kingdom). Throughout the late 20th century the journal documented shifts in therapeutic practice concurrent with regulatory changes enacted by bodies like Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food (United Kingdom) and veterinary curricula reorganization influenced by Higher Education Funding Council for England. The journal’s milestones coincide with conferences hosted by Society for Equine Locomotor Research, collaborative projects with Wellcome Trust, and thematic issues reflecting outbreaks investigated by Veterinary Laboratories Agency.

Scope and Content

Scope covers clinical practice and translational research relevant to specialties represented at European College of Equine Internal Medicine, American College of Veterinary Surgeons, and research centers such as Royal Veterinary College Clinical Skills Centre, Institut Pasteur, and University of Zurich. Topics include diagnostics and imaging techniques developed at Mayo Clinic, Johns Hopkins Hospital, and Karolinska Institutet, surgical innovations akin to work at Massey University, pharmacology studies linked to Pfizer-funded trials and Merck collaborations, and epidemiology investigations comparable to studies from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Food and Agriculture Organization, and European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. The journal publishes special sections on lameness research tied to advances at University of Liverpool School of Veterinary Science, infectious disease reports echoing findings from Pasteur Institute, welfare analyses overlapping projects by World Animal Protection, and rehabilitation protocols similar to programs at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital.

Abstracting and Indexing

The periodical is abstracted and indexed in major bibliographic services aligned with standards used by PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and databases managed by Clarivate Analytics and Elsevier. Inclusion criteria reflect policies from organizations such as Committee on Publication Ethics and indexing requirements used by Directory of Open Access Journals and CrossRef. Metadata practices follow guidelines promoted by National Information Standards Organization and standards employed by institutional repositories at Harvard University, University of Oxford, and Yale University.

Editorial Board and Publisher

Editorial leadership has drawn editors and board members from institutions like Rothamsted Research, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Melbourne, University of Sydney, and professional bodies including Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, American Veterinary Medical Association, and European College of Veterinary Pathologists. The publisher collaborates with academic presses and commercial publishers that handle scholarly titles for societies such as Wiley-Blackwell, Elsevier, and Springer Nature and coordinates with service providers like CrossRef and archival partners including CLOCKSS and Portico. Peer review policies align with standards promoted by COPE and operational workflows integrate manuscript management systems used broadly in scholarly publishing at institutions like Elsevier Editorial System and Editorial Manager.

Impact and Reception

The journal’s influence is measured through citation metrics maintained by Clarivate Analytics and Scopus, and through recognition in practitioner circles including British Equine Veterinary Association meetings, American Association of Equine Practitioners conventions, and symposia at Royal Veterinary College. Articles have been cited in policy documents from World Organisation for Animal Health and guidance from National Institute for Health and Care Excellence where equine health intersects with public health concerns. Reception among clinicians and researchers parallels esteem afforded to specialty journals such as Veterinary Surgery, Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, and Equine Veterinary Education and is reflected in awards from organizations like International Society for Equitation Science and grants from funders including Wellcome Trust and European Research Council.

Category:Veterinary journals