JMIR Public Health and Surveillance

A multidisciplinary journal that focuses on the intersection of public health and technology, public health informatics, mass media campaigns, surveillance, participatory epidemiology, and innovation in public health practice and research.

Editor-in-Chief:

Travis Sanchez, DVM, MPH, Emory University Rollins School of Public Health, USA


Impact Factor 3.9 CiteScore 6.3

JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (JPHS, Editor-in-chief: Travis Sanchez, Emory University/Rollins School of Public Health) is a top-ranked (Q1) Clarivate (SCIE, SSCI etc), ScopusPubMed, PubMed CentralMEDLINE, Sherpa/Romeo, DOAJ, Embase, CABI, and EBSCO/EBSCO essentials indexed, peer-reviewed international multidisciplinary journal with a unique focus on the intersection of innovation and technology in public health, and includes topics like public health informatics, surveillance (surveillance systems and rapid reports), participatory epidemiology, infodemiology and infoveillance, digital disease detection, digital epidemiology, electronic public health interventions, mass media/social media campaigns, health communication, and emerging population health analysis systems and tools. 

JMIR Public Health and Surveillance received a Journal Impact Factor of 3.9ranked Q1 #59/419 journals in the category Public, Environmental & Occupational Health (Journal Citation Reports 2025 from Clarivate).

JMIR Public Health and Surveillance received a Scopus CiteScore of 6.3 (2024), placing it in the 84th percentile (#110/687) as a Q1 journal in the field of Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health.

JPHS has an international author- and readership and welcomes submissions from around the world.

We publish regular articles, reviews, protocols/system descriptions and viewpoint papers on all aspects of public health, with a focus on innovation and technology in public health. The main themes/topics covered by this journal can be found here.

Apart from publishing traditional public health research and viewpoint papers as well as reports from traditional surveillance systems, JPH was one of the first (if not the only) peer-reviewed journals to publish papers with surveillance or pharmacovigilance data from non-traditional, unstructured big data and text sources such as social media and the Internet (infoveillance, digital disease detection), or reports on novel participatory epidemiology projects, where observations are solicited from the public.  

Among other innovations, JPHS is also dedicated to support rapid open data sharing and rapid open access to surveillance and outbreak data. As one of the novel features we plan to publish rapid or even real-time surveillance reports and open data. The methods and description of the surveillance system may be peer-reviewed and published only once in detail, in a  "baseline report" (in a JMIR Res Protoc or a JMIR Public Health & Surveill paper), and authors then have the possibility to publish data and reports in frequent intervals rapidly and with only minimal additional peer-review (we call this article type "Rapid Surveillance Reports"). JMIR Publications may even work with authors/researchers and developers of selected surveillance systems on APIs for semi-automated reports (e.g. weekly reports to be automatically published in JPHS and indexed in PubMed, based on data-feeds from surveillance systems and minimal narratives and abstracts).

Furthermore, during epidemics and public health emergencies, submissions with critical data will be processed with expedited peer-review to enable publication within days or even in real-time.

We also publish descriptions of open data resources and open source software. Where possible, we can and want to publish or even host the actual software or dataset on the journal website.

Recent Articles

Article Thumbnail
Cross-Sectional Studies in Public Health

The COVID-19 pandemic amplified digital divides in Brazil, restricting vulnerable groups’ online access to health information and preventive guidance, with limited intersectional analyses of these inequities.

|
Article Thumbnail
Longitudinal and Cohort Studies in Public Health

Positive expectancies of cannabis use (CPE), the beliefs about the anticipated positive effects of cannabis, are a robust cognitive precursor of adolescent cannabis initiation and escalation. However, little is known about how sociodemographic, familial, and psychopathology predict CPE or how CPE evolves across early adolescence.

|
Article Thumbnail
Mass Media/Social Media Communication and Campaigns

Vaccine hesitancy has increased in recent decades internationally, which sets up a critical barrier to the rapid deployment of novel vaccines against infection with SARS-CoV-2.

|
Article Thumbnail
General Articles on Innovation and Technology in Public Health

Scales for measuring health literacy and numeracy have been broadly classified into performance-based (objective) and self-reported (subjective) scales. Both types of scales have been widely used in research and practice; however, they are not always consistent and may assess different latent constructs. Furthermore, an increasing number of objective measures have been developed and it is unclear how many latent factors should be assumed.

|
Article Thumbnail
Infectious Diseases (non-STD/STI)

The burden of seasonal influenza on emergency department (ED) visits is poorly quantified due to case ascertainment and data availability challenges. This study estimates county-level respiratory ED visits attributable to influenza using time-series models and examines spatial heterogeneity in county-level burden in 3 states.

|
Article Thumbnail
Tutorial

Online data collection can reach large populations efficiently and cost-effectively. However, the increase in bots and scammers (ie, person- or software-based fraudulent completions) completing online surveys raises data integrity issues and wastes scarce research resources.

|
Article Thumbnail
Surveillance Systems

To tackle the risk of emerging and re-emerging diseases, it is critical for countries with limited resources to prioritize endemic and emerging zoonotic diseases of greatest national concern. One Health is an integrated, unifying approach that aims to sustainably balance and optimize the health of people, animals, and ecosystems.

|
Article Thumbnail
Prevention and Health Promotion

Type 2 diabetes (T2D) remains one of the most underdiagnosed chronic conditions worldwide, despite its major contribution to cardiovascular and metabolic morbidity. In 2024, an estimated 589 million adults were living with diabetes globally, more than 90% of whom had T2D, and prevalence is projected to reach 853 million by 2050. In France, approximately 4.1 million adults are affected, and nearly one in four individuals with diabetes remain undiagnosed. Early detection is therefore essential to prevent complications. Workplace-based prevention strategies offer an opportunity to enhance early detection, particularly among employed adults with limited access to regular medical screening. In France, the Union Prévention Santé pour la Fonction publique (UROPS) has implemented a systematic glucose-screening program for civil servants to identify individuals at risk of T2D or prediabetes. Given that the French public service includes 5.7 million workers—around one in five of the national workforce—this setting provides a unique opportunity to reach large, diverse, and often underserved segments of the adult population.

|
Article Thumbnail
Participatory Epidemiology and Surveillance

Stroke is a leading cause of death and long-term disability worldwide, with an estimated 6.2 million deaths each year. In Bangladesh, data on stroke prevalence and risk factors in rural areas is limited.

|
Article Thumbnail
Obesity and Nutrition as Public Health Problem

Overweight and obesity are major risk factors for numerous chronic diseases, requiring effective prevention and intervention strategies. Community-based BMI screening may enhance awareness of weight status, but its effectiveness remains uncertain.

|
Article Thumbnail
Cross-Sectional Studies in Public Health

Emerging studies suggest that exposure to the COVID-19 pandemic may have heightened the risks of neurodevelopmental disorders in infants (0–1-year-old); however, population-based studies investigating these associations in Chinese contexts remain scarce, particularly including the postpandemic phase.

|
Article Thumbnail
Cross-Sectional Studies in Public Health

Hainan is a pilot free trade port in China and a multiethnic province. Catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) reflects health care inequity, particularly affecting vulnerable groups in rapidly developing multiethnic regions.

|

Preprints Open for Peer Review

We are working in partnership with