Aim and Scope
GIPPH strives to:
- Advance Public Health Knowledge: Publish high-impact research on disease prevention, health promotion, and epidemiological methods.
- Inform Evidence-Based Policy: Provide actionable insights for healthcare governance, health economics, and global health initiatives.
- Promote Health Equity: Focus on the social determinants of health and vulnerable populations to reduce global health disparities.
- Foster Interdisciplinary Collaboration: Bridge the gap between academic research, community medicine, and real-world public health practice.
Scope of the Journal
GIPPH welcomes high-quality submissions in the following core areas and related interdisciplinary fields:
- Epidemiology & Biostatistics: Disease surveillance, outbreak investigations, population health modeling, and longitudinal studies.
- Preventive Medicine & Primary Care: Vaccination programs, screening initiatives, lifestyle-related disease prevention, and risk reduction strategies.
- Health Policy & Management: Health systems research, healthcare economics, policy analysis, and program evaluation.
- Environmental & Occupational Health: Climate change impacts on health, workplace safety, toxicological risk assessment, and environmental exposures.
- Global Health & International Initiatives: Global disease burden, cross-border health challenges, and international health equity projects.
- Community Medicine & Social Sciences: Maternal and child health, nutrition, health literacy, and the social determinants of health.
- Public Health Informatics: Use of big data, digital health tools, and AI in public health monitoring and emergency response.
Article Categories Accepted
To accommodate diverse public health evidence, GIPPH accepts:
- Original Research Articles (Empirical studies and population-based research)
- Review Articles & Systematic Reviews (including Narrative and Scoping reviews)
- Policy Briefs & Commentaries (Analysis of current health policies and expert opinions)
- Short Communications (Preliminary findings or rapid reports)
- Case Studies (Unique community-based or outbreak-related observations)
- Technical Notes (Methodological advancements in epidemiology or biostatistics)