Generated by GPT-5-mini| Journal of Infectious Diseases | |
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| Title | Journal of Infectious Diseases |
| Discipline | Infectious diseases |
| Abbreviation | J. Infect. Dis. |
| Publisher | Oxford University Press |
| History | 1904–present |
| Frequency | Biweekly |
| Country | United States |
Journal of Infectious Diseases is a peer-reviewed medical journal covering research on infectious diseases, clinical microbiology, and epidemiology. The journal publishes original research, reviews, and commentary contributing to public health, clinical practice, and basic science. It is associated with prominent institutions and has influenced policies, clinical guidelines, and scientific discourse.
The publication was established in 1904 during a period marked by research advances linked to institutions such as Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Harvard University, Columbia University, and University of Pennsylvania. Early contributors included investigators affiliated with Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Pasteur Institute, Wellcome Trust, National Institutes of Health, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; these relationships paralleled developments described by figures connected to Louis Pasteur, Robert Koch, Paul Ehrlich, Rudolf Virchow, and Alexander Fleming. Through the twentieth century the journal documented outbreaks and discoveries referenced in contexts like Spanish flu, Yellow fever, Poliomyelitis, Smallpox eradication campaign, and HIV/AIDS pandemic. Editorial leadership transitioned alongside academic shifts at places like Yale University, Massachusetts General Hospital, University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, and Stanford University, reflecting broader scientific networks linked to awards such as the Nobel Prize and Lasker Award.
The journal covers pathogen-focused research on organisms studied at facilities including Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, Institut Pasteur, Karolinska Institutet, and Max Planck Society. Topics span clinical trials reminiscent of studies in contexts like Randomized Controlled Trials used by investigators at Mayo Clinic and Cleveland Clinic, mechanistic studies associated with labs at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and Salk Institute for Biological Studies, and population-level analyses tied to cohorts from Framingham Heart Study style designs. Content ranges from vaccine development narratives linked to programs at Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to antimicrobial resistance reports that intersect with initiatives at World Health Organization and Global Fund. Contributions have engaged researchers from universities such as University of California, San Francisco, Imperial College London, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, University of Toronto, and University of Melbourne.
Editorial processes have involved editors and board members drawn from institutions including National Institutes of Health, Food and Drug Administration, Royal Society, American Academy of Microbiology, and European Molecular Biology Organization. Peer review procedures reflect standards similar to those implemented by journals at Nature Publishing Group, Science (journal), The Lancet, New England Journal of Medicine, and BMJ (journal), engaging reviewers affiliated with laboratories at Broad Institute, Wellcome Sanger Institute, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, and clinical centers like Johns Hopkins Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital. Editorial policies have intersected with ethical frameworks promoted by organizations such as Committee on Publication Ethics, International Committee of Medical Journal Editors, and funding agencies like Wellcome Trust, National Science Foundation, and European Research Council.
The journal is indexed in major databases maintained by entities including PubMed, MEDLINE, Scopus, Web of Science, and Embase. Abstracting services managed by organizations such as Clarivate Analytics and Elsevier facilitate discoverability alongside catalogs at research libraries including Library of Congress, British Library, and National Library of Medicine. Citation tracking ties into metrics reported by indices like the Journal Citation Reports, h-index compilations used by Google Scholar, and academic profiling at ORCID and ResearchGate.
The journal's impact has been measured in relation to citation indices computed by Clarivate Analytics and discussed in analyses from institutions such as Institute for Scientific Information and National Institutes of Health. Its articles have influenced public health policy deliberations at World Health Organization, US Department of Health and Human Services, European Commission, and advisory bodies including panels convened by Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices and Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS. Reception among academic circles at Harvard Medical School, Yale School of Medicine, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, and London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine has shaped curricular citations and guideline references appearing in documents from American Medical Association and specialty societies like Infectious Diseases Society of America.
Published works have included landmark reports paralleling breakthroughs by figures associated with Alexander Fleming, Jonas Salk, Albert Sabin, Edward Jenner, and Paul Ehrlich; randomized trial reports akin to those from Derek Angus-style investigators; vaccine efficacy papers related to programs from Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; and molecular epidemiology studies connected to consortia such as Global Initiative on Sharing Avian Influenza Data and INTEGRATE. Seminal contributions documented pathogen characterizations, outbreak investigations, and clinical trial outcomes that informed interventions used by World Health Organization campaigns and national programs at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Public Health England.
Category:Medical journals