New curriculum raises kidney awareness
Open access journal comes to SAGE Publishing with six-part series on kidney care and treatment
Open access journal comes to SAGE Publishing with six-part series on kidney care and treatment
SAGE is pleased to launch JDR Clinical & Translational Research in partnership with the International and American Associations for Dental Research (IADR/AADR). Publishing dental, oral, and craniofacial research at the interface of discovery science and clinical application, this new publication is a resource for researchers, clinician scientists, patients, and policymakers in the dental community. Dr.
1. Narrative research
2. Phenomenology research
3. Grounded theory research
4. Ethnographic research
5. Case study research
The Author Behind the Five Approaches
Los Angeles, CA- SAGE Publishing is pleased to announce a partnership with the National Association of Hispanic Nurses (NAHN) to publish Hispanic Health Care International (HHCI). The quarterly journal disseminates the latest information on clinical practice, education, research and policy issues concerning the Hispanic/Latino population to address their current and future health needs.
New research quantifying the risk of admission to hospital for self-harm has identified a raised risk of self-harm among groups of patients with certain physical illnesses. While it is known that psychiatric illnesses are associated with a greatly elevated risk of self-harm, a moderately elevated risk was seen with common physical illnesses such as diabetes, epilepsy and asthma.
Los Angeles, CA - Leading SAGE medical journal, Menopause International, the flagship journal of the British Menopause Society (BMS), is expanding its scope and changing its name to Post Reproductive Health from March 2014.
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London, UK. SAGE Publishing today announces that it is to launch in 2016 Brain and Neuroscience Advances, the official open access (OA) journal of the British Neuroscience Association (BNA).
A new study finds that college students with disabilities binge drink more often than their non-disabled student peers. The study, providing the first picture of alcohol use and binge drinking by US college students with disabilities, is out today in Public Health Reports, a SAGE Publishing journal and the official journal of the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General and the U.S. Public Health Service.