Generated by GPT-5-mini| Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports | |
|---|---|
| Title | Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports |
| Discipline | Sports medicine |
| Abbreviation | Scand. J. Med. Sci. Sports |
| Editor | --- |
| Publisher | Wiley-Blackwell |
| Country | Sweden |
| History | 1991–present |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| Impact | --- |
Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports is a peer-reviewed academic journal covering sports medicine and applied exercise physiology with emphasis on clinical and experimental studies relevant to athletes and active populations. The journal serves researchers, clinicians, and policymakers connected to institutions such as Karolinska Institutet, University of Copenhagen, University of Oslo, University of Helsinki, and Aarhus University by publishing original research, reviews, and consensus statements. Contributors and readers commonly include investigators affiliated with organizations like International Olympic Committee, European College of Sport Science, American College of Sports Medicine, FIFA, and national sports federations.
The journal was established in the early 1990s during a period of expansion in sports medicine publishing alongside titles such as British Journal of Sports Medicine, Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, Journal of Applied Physiology, and European Journal of Sport Science. Founding editors and editorial boards drew on networks spanning Karolinska Institutet, University of Gothenburg, University of Lund, Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, and University of Tromsø. Over successive editorial terms the journal responded to developments originating from major events including the Olympic Games and World Athletics Championships by increasing emphasis on translational research, injury surveillance, and load management. Wiley-Blackwell assumed publishing responsibilities in alignment with other society-affiliated journals like Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health and Acta Physiologica.
The journal emphasizes clinical trials, cohort studies, randomized controlled trials, and mechanistic research on topics prominent at institutions such as Karolinska Institutet, University of Birmingham, Harvard University, Stanford University School of Medicine, and Massachusetts General Hospital. Typical subject areas include concussion research linked to FIFA initiatives, thermoregulation studies influenced by IAAF policy shifts, muscle physiology work tracing techniques back to laboratories at University of Copenhagen and University of California, Berkeley, and epidemiology of injury with ties to databases maintained by Norwegian School of Sport Sciences and Swedish National Institutes of Health. Reviews often synthesize guidance from bodies like World Health Organization, European Medicines Agency, National Institutes of Health, and professional societies including American College of Sports Medicine.
Editorial leadership has included scholars affiliated with Karolinska Institutet, University of Oslo, University of Jyväskylä, University of Sydney, and McMaster University. The journal uses peer review processes comparable to those of The Lancet, BMJ, JAMA, and New England Journal of Medicine in managing original submissions, methodological reviews, and consensus statements. Publication frequency and production are coordinated by Wiley-Blackwell, which also publishes journals such as The Cochrane Library-related titles and collaborates with societies including European College of Sport Science and national academies like the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. The editorial office liaises with indexing services and ethical bodies including the Committee on Publication Ethics.
The journal is indexed in major databases used by institutions such as PubMed Central, Scopus, Web of Science, Embase, and SPORTDiscus; inclusion places it alongside journals indexed for grant panels at agencies such as the European Research Council, National Institutes of Health, Swedish Research Council, and Research Council of Norway. Abstracting facilitates discoverability for researchers at universities including University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, Uppsala University, Trinity College Dublin, and ETH Zurich. Metadata standards align with those of organizations like ORCID and CrossRef to support citation and research assessment exercises conducted by bodies like Times Higher Education and ShanghaiRanking.
The journal's impact is reflected in citations from clinical guidelines and consensus documents produced by entities such as International Olympic Committee Medical Commission, World Anti-Doping Agency, European Society of Cardiology, and national sports medicine associations in Sweden, Norway, Denmark, and Finland. Comparative reception places it among specialist titles that inform practice at hospitals like Karolinska University Hospital and research centers such as the Australian Institute of Sport and Aspetar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital. Scholarly reviews and meta-analyses in journals like BMJ, The Lancet, JAMA, and British Journal of Sports Medicine frequently cite work published in the journal, contributing to debates on athlete health, anti-doping policy, and public health recommendations advanced by World Health Organization panels.
Notable contributions include multicenter injury surveillance reports associated with events like the Olympic Games and FIFA World Cup, randomized trials on training interventions with authors from University of Copenhagen and McMaster University, and consensus statements on concussion and load monitoring coauthored by experts affiliated with International Olympic Committee and European College of Sport Science. Special issues have addressed heat acclimation before World Athletics Championships, altitude training strategies used by national teams such as Norway national football team and Sweden national football team, and anti-doping science intersecting with World Anti-Doping Agency policy. Influential review articles synthesizing evidence from laboratories at Karolinska Institutet, University of Birmingham, University of Cape Town, McMaster University, and University of Queensland have shaped clinical pathways adopted by sports medicine clinics and national federations.
Category:Academic journals