British Journal of Cancer explained

British Journal of Cancer
Cover:British Journal of Cancer (cover).jpg
Editor:Adrian L Harris
Discipline:Oncology
Language:English
Abbreviation:Br. J. Cancer
Publisher:Nature Research
Country:United Kingdom
Frequency:24/year
History:1947–present
Openaccess:After 12 months
License:CC-BY-NC-SA 3.0 (1999+)
Impact:9.0
Impact-Year:2021
Website:https://nature.com/bjc
Issn:0007-0920
Eissn:1532-1827

The British Journal of Cancer (BJC) is a twice-monthly professional medical journal published by Springer Nature's Nature Research.

The BJC provides a forum for clinicians and scientists to communicate original research findings that have relevance to understanding the etiology of cancer and to improving patient treatment and survival. Once accepted, papers are published in print and online.

Full research papers are published under six broad headings:

History

The journal was founded in 1947 by the then British Empire Cancer Campaign (later named Cancer Research Campaign),[1] one of the research charities which later merged to form Cancer Research UK. Cancer Research Campaign began partnering with Nature as publisher of the journal in the 1980s, but retained ownership and editorial control. In 2021, after the charity experienced a fall in charitable income during the COVID-19 pandemic, Cancer Research UK sold the journal to Springer Nature.[2]

Ranking

According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal received an impact factor of 9.0,[3] ranking it 39th journals in the category of Oncology.[4] SJR ranked BJC as 30th journal in cancer research with H-index 224.[5]

Indexing

BJC is a top cited general cancer journal committed to publishing cutting edge discovery, translational and clinical cancer research.[6] The journal is indexed in:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk/search/archives/ac073e20-ab3b-32ee-a8ec-94881d4c339f
  2. Web site: Springer Nature acquires British Journal of Cancer | Springer Nature Group | Springer Nature .
  3. Web site: British Journal of Cancer . Nature portfolio.
  4. Book: 2019 Journal Citation Reports. Thomson Reuters. 2018. Sciences. Web of Science. Journals Ranked by Impact: Oncology.
  5. Web site: H-index Reports.
  6. Web site: OfficialWebsite. 23 January 2023 .