Western Journal of Medicine explained

Western Journal of Medicine
Editor:Michael Wilkes
Discipline:Medicine
Former Names:Transactions of the Medical Society of the State of California, California State Journal of Medicine, California and Western Medicine, California Medicine, Western Journal of Medicine
Abbreviation:West. J. Med.
Publisher:BMJ Group
Frequency:Monthly
History:1856–2002
Openaccess:Yes
Link1:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/journals/183/
Link1-Name:Online archive
Oclc:1799362
Lccn:75642547
Coden:WJMDA2
Issn:0093-0415
Eissn:1476-2978

The Western Journal of Medicine was a peer-reviewed medical journal. It was established in 1856 as the Transactions of the Medical Society of the State of California. It was renamed California State Journal of Medicine in 1902 and volume numbering was restarted at 1. In 1924 it was renamed California and Western Medicine and in 1946 California Medicine. In 1974, it obtained its final title, Western Journal of Medicine,[1] which was styled as wjm from 1999 on. In 1985, the journal absorbed Arizona Medicine.[2] It ceased publication in 2002 because it was not financially viable any more.[3] The journal was lastly published by the BMJ Group with Michael Wilkes as its editor-in-chief.

Abstracting and indexing

The journal was abstracted and indexed by EBSCO databases, Gale databases, MEDLINE, ProQuest, PubMed, and Scopus.[4]

References

  1. Web site: Archive of "The Western Journal of Medicine" . . . 2012-12-28.
  2. Web site: Arizona Medicine . . NLM Catalog . 2012-12-28.
  3. Wilkes . Michael . The future of wjm . Western Journal of Medicine . September 2002 . 176 . 4 . 221 . 1071731.
  4. Web site: wjm . . ProQuest LLC . 27 December 2012.

External links