| Latest article Dead or alive: animal sampling during Ebola hemorrhagic fever outbreaks in humans by Sarah H. Olson et al. (Published: 30 April 2012) Bangladesh arsenic mitigation programs: lessons from the past by Abul Hasnat Milton et al. (Published: 30 April 2012) |
| Aims & Scope The Emerging Health Threats Journal is an international, peer-reviewed journal publishing the latest and best research on emerging threats to human health. Its focus is threats from any source, including the environment, chemicals, radiation, pathogens, and society. It welcomes papers on the preparedness and response to natural or man-made disasters, including those that involve the deliberate release of chemical, biological, or radio-nuclear material. Content will be determined by novelty and scope of the threat, and by scientific excellence. The Journal welcomes investigative studies that promote the understanding of factors involved in the emergence, prevention, and elimination of health threats. Articles on lessons learned from disaster and crisis response are particularly encouraged. The Journal seeks high-quality submissions from academic, industrial, clinical practice, public health, and government research and planning sectors of original research articles, reviews, policy reviews, lessons learned, commentaries, and perspectives on emerging threats to human health. Read more here. As from 2012 a Publication fee of €750 will be charged to the authors upon acceptance of their paper. Members of the International Society for Disease Surveillance are entitled to a discounted fee of €525. Papers submitted after November 1st 2011 will be subject to payment. For a list of universities/institutes and funders supporting Open Access publication, please see here. | WHY PUBLISH WITH EHT-J? Open Access – EHT-J is free from all access barriers, allowing for the widest possible dissemination of your work. Easy online submission – simply click on the ‘Submit Manuscript’ button, register yourself as an author, submit your paper and follow its progression. Supplementary material – you may add data sets, protocols, videos, questionnaires, etc. to your paper - at no cost. Retain copyright – you are free to disseminate your work, make unlimited copies, and deposit it in any repository. Personal service – EHT-J is published by a small yet global Open Access scholarly publisher dedicated to giving you excellent service. Post-publication statistics – you can continue to login to the website after publication and check the number of full-text views your paper is receiving. Comply with archiving policies – you can deposit any version of your manuscript in any required repository or archive, or post it to your personal or institutional website. |
Announcements
The EHT Journal introduces Publication fee |
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| As from 2012, a Publication fee of €750 will be charged to the authors upon acceptance of their paper. Papers submitted after November 1st 2011 (and published primo 2012) will be subject to payment. | |
| Posted: 2011-10-07 | More... |
Emerging Health Threats Journal now archived in PubMed Central! |
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| As of September 8, 2011, Emerging Health Threats Journal is archived with PubMed Central, the free digital archive of biomedical and life sciences journal literature at the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH). | |
| Posted: 2011-09-07 | More... |
Emerging Health Threats Journal has moved to Co-Action Publishing |
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| You are welcome to discuss proposed papers with the Editor-in-Chief prior to submission. Read the Author Guidelines here. | |
| Posted: 2011-04-07 | More... |
ePub format available from 2011! |
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| Co-Action Publishing is pleased to announce the introduction of an EPUB format for all of our titles from 2011. | |
| Posted: 2011-03-02 | More... |
| More Announcements... |
Emerging Health Threats Journal eISSN 1752-8550
Emerging Health Threats Journal Supplements eISSN 1752-8550, ISSN 2001-1350 (print)
This journal is published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License. Responsible editor: Andrew Robertson.