| Discipline | Public health,occupational health |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Edited by | Andrew Maier |
| Publication details | |
| History | 1995–2018 |
| Publisher | |
| Frequency | Quarterly |
| 1.195 (2017) | |
| Standard abbreviations ISO 4 (alt) · Bluebook (alt) NLM (alt) · MathSciNet (alt | |
| ISO 4 | Int. J. Occup. Environ. Health |
| Indexing CODEN (alt · alt2) · JSTOR (alt) · LCCN (alt) MIAR · NLM (alt) · Scopus · W&L | |
| CODEN | IOEHFU |
| ISSN | 1077-3525 (print) 2049-3967 (web) |
| LCCN | 95652867 |
| OCLC no. | 60627199 |
| Links | |
TheInternational Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health was a quarterlypeer-reviewedpublic health journal with a focus onoccupational andenvironmental health. It was established in 1995 and was published byRoutledge. The lasteditor-in-chief was Andrew Maier (University of Cincinnati).
The journal was established in 1995, and was originally published byManey Publishing. Its foundingeditor-in-chief wasJoseph LaDou (University of California, San Francisco), who initially spent between $50,000 and $75,000 of his own money each year to keep publishing the journal.[1] David Egilman (Brown University) replaced LaDou as the journal's editor-in-chief in 2007. As of 2009, it was the official journal of theInternational Commission on Occupational Health.[2] Along with the rest of Maney's portfolio, the journal was acquired by Taylor & Francis in 2015,[1] which will stop publishing it at the end of 2018.[3]
A 2000 article inOccupational and Environmental Medicine identified theInternational Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health as one of the eight most prominent journals in the occupational health field.[4] EpidemiologistDavid Michaels toldProPublica in 2017 that the journal was one of the few publications where "scientists whose work is independent of the corporations that manufacture chemicals" could publish their research, adding, "The silencing of that voice would be a real loss to the field."[1]
Shortly after acquiring the journal in 2015, Taylor & Francis angered theeditorial board by appointing Andrew Maier as the journal's new editor-in-chief without consulting the board. In an April 2017 letter to Taylor & Francis, the board's 22 members called attention to their concerns about some of the publisher's recent practices. The editors stated in the letter that, had they been consulted, they probably would not have approved of Maier's appointment, citing the tendency of his research to reach conclusions favorable to entities withconflicts of interest in the topic. The editorial board members also criticized Taylor & Francis for retracting a paper by Egilman[5] with no explanation. The following month, Taylor & Francis managing director Ian Bannerman responded to the letter, claiming that he had consulted editorial board member Jukka Takala before offering Maier the position of editor-in-chief. Takala, who had signed the original letter, toldRetraction Watch that, in fact, he had not been contacted prior to Maier's appointment.[6]
In November 2017, the editorial board sent a letter to theNational Library of Medicine asking for the journal to be removed fromMEDLINE. Later that month, the entire board resigned in protest. In their letter sent to Bannerman, the editors cited Taylor & Francis' appointment of Maier as editor-in-chief, as well as the company's unexplained retraction of Egilman's paper, as among the reasons for their resignation.[1][7]
The journal is abstracted and indexed in:
According to theJournal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2017impact factor of 1.195.[14]