Generated by GPT-5-mini| Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association | |
|---|---|
| Title | Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association |
| Abbreviation | JAVMA |
| Discipline | Veterinary medicine |
| Publisher | American Veterinary Medical Association |
| Country | United States |
| Frequency | Biweekly |
| History | 1875–present |
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association is a peer-reviewed professional journal published by the American Veterinary Medical Association that serves clinicians, researchers, and educators associated with institutions such as Cornell University, University of California, Davis, Ohio State University, University of Pennsylvania, and Texas A&M University. The journal reports clinical studies, case reports, policy analyses, and guidelines relevant to veterinary practitioners working with species including those studied at Smithsonian Institution, Royal Veterinary College, Wageningen University, University of Sydney, and University of Edinburgh. As an outlet connected to associations like the American Animal Hospital Association, American Association of Veterinary Clinicians, World Organisation for Animal Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Food and Drug Administration, the journal intersects with public health, zoonoses, and regulatory science discussed at forums such as the World Health Organization and Pan American Health Organization.
The journal traces lineage through professional publishing initiatives contemporaneous with organizations like the American Veterinary Medical Association founding and parallels periodicals from the Royal Society era and early medical journals like The Lancet and New England Journal of Medicine. Early editorial practice reflected influences from institutions including Harvard University, Johns Hopkins University, University of Michigan, Columbia University, and Yale University. Throughout the twentieth century, editorial evolution mirrored debates occurring at conferences such as the American Public Health Association meetings and policy shifts similar to those debated in the U.S. Congress and committees of the National Institutes of Health. Landmark editorial campaigns referenced developments in veterinary education at Iowa State University, Michigan State University, Purdue University, and research migrations visible at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and Bell Labs-era collaborations. The journal's continuity through wars and pandemics recalls institutional responses analogous to those by United States Department of Agriculture, Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, Canadian Veterinary Medical Association, and wartime research programs tied to Office of Scientific Research and Development.
Content spans clinical practice guidance relevant to specialists affiliated with American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine, American College of Veterinary Surgeons, American College of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care, and veterinary public health professionals aligned with Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges. Editorial policies reflect ethical standards discussed by bodies like the Committee on Publication Ethics, and the journal adopts conflict-of-interest frameworks similar to those at National Academy of Sciences and Institute of Medicine. Peer review workflows engage reviewers drawn from faculties at University of Glasgow, Karolinska Institutet, Tokyo University, Seoul National University, and University of Zurich. Manuscript types include randomized clinical trials influenced by methodologies promoted at Cochrane Collaboration and systematic reviews analogous to evidence synthesis used by United States Preventive Services Task Force.
The journal is abstracted in major bibliographic services akin to PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Embase, and CAB Abstracts, which interface with libraries such as Library of Congress, British Library, Bibliothèque nationale de France, and university consortia at University of Toronto and University of Melbourne. Indexing ensures discoverability alongside comparable journals like Veterinary Record, Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, Preventive Veterinary Medicine, and clinical medicine titles such as BMJ and JAMA. Citation tracking occurs through platforms operated by organizations such as Clarivate Analytics and Elsevier.
Published on a biweekly schedule by an association headquartered in locations like the American Veterinary Medical Association offices near national professional centers and coordinated with membership services similar to those at American Medical Association and Royal Society of Medicine. Distribution networks involve academic publishers and institutional subscriptions seen with Oxford University Press, Springer Nature, Wiley-Blackwell, and SAGE Publications. Access models include mixed subscription and author-pays open access routes paralleling policies at PLOS, BioMed Central, and hybrid platforms used by Nature Publishing Group. Archival access aligns with digitization efforts of repositories such as HathiTrust, JSTOR, PubMed Central, and national archives like National Library of Medicine.
The journal's influence is measured by citation metrics comparable to those reported by Science Citation Index, and it contributes to continuing education programs accredited by entities like the American Veterinary Medical Association continuing education committees and specialist colleges including European College of Veterinary Internal Medicine. Reviews and commentary in professional outlets mirror discourse found in publications such as Veterinary Practice News and stakeholder reactions echo positions by American Kennel Club, Humane Society of the United States, World Veterinary Association, and academic critiques issued at symposia hosted by Royal Society-affiliated meetings. The journal has been cited in policy deliberations involving agencies like Environmental Protection Agency and legislative hearings at the United States Senate.
Notable contributions include clinical trials and case series that informed guidelines comparable to those produced by American Heart Association, diagnostic validation studies similar to work at Mayo Clinic, and outbreak investigations resonant with reports from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and World Health Organization. Landmark reports have influenced curricula at Colorado State University, University of Florida, North Carolina State University, and specialty training overseen by American Board of Veterinary Specialties. Seminal articles addressed zoonotic diseases discussed alongside research from Rockefeller University and comparative pathology linked to findings at Massachusetts General Hospital and Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Category:Veterinary journals