Readership
Bacteriologists, Entomologists, Epidemiologists, Immunologists, Infectious Disease Specialists, Mycologists, Parasitologists, Pharmacologists, Public Health Professionals, Researchers, Scientists, Scientists - Research/Biomedical Aging, Social Scientists, Virologists
Scope
Aims:
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (ISSN 2414-6366) publishes authoritative and original articles, critical and systematic reviews, editorials, perspectives, short communications, commentaries, book reviews, letters to the editor and Special Issues on all aspects of tropical medicine and infectious disease. Our aim is to encourage scientists to publish their experimental and theoretical results in as much detail as possible. There is no restriction on the maximum length of the papers. The full experimental details must be provided so that the results can be reproduced. There is, in addition, a unique feature of this journal:
We consider studies of high scientific quality that show meaningful but negative results. While there are many journals that focus on tropical medicine and infectious disease studies, none of them actively accept negative results. As a result, most negative data do not end up in the public domain, even if the data were meaningfully negative and the study was well-designed and executed. By accepting such negative results, our journal encourages scientists to share these data, to avoid unnecessary duplication by others.
Scope:
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease publishes on all tropical diseases of global significance, as well as neglected tropical diseases as defined from time to time by the World Health Organization. The scope of the journal includes, but is not limited to: Clinical Tropical Medicine; Tropical Public Health; Tropical Infectious Diseases; Parasitology And Entomology; Bacteriology, Mycology and Virology; Epidemiological and Social Science Studies; Chemotherapy and Pharmacology; Immunology; Disease Prevention, Control and Elimination; Emerging and Re-Emerging Infectious Diseases; Emerging Public Health Threats; Global Health and One Health.