WILEY - Knowledge For Generations
cart.gif CART |  MY ACCOUNT |  CONTACT US |  HELP    

NEW Bioethics Five-year impact factor: 1.731!

Bioethics

Journal of the International Association of Bioethics

Edited by:
Ruth Chadwick and Udo Schüklenk


ISI Journal Citation Reports® Ranking: 2008: 5/7 Medical Ethics; 8/28 Ethics; 9/32 Social Issues; 17/29 Social Sciences, Biomedical
Impact Factor: 1.013


Bioethics provides a forum for well-argued articles on the ethical questions raised by current issues such as: international collaborative clinical research in developing countries, organ transplants and xenotransplantation, ageing and the human lifespan, AIDS, genomics, and stem cell research. These questions are considered in relation to concrete ethical, legal and policy problems, or in terms of the fundamental concepts, principles and theories used in discussions of such problems.

FREE as part of your subscription to Bioethics is Developing World Bioethics - click here for further information!

For information about Blackwell Publication Ethics, click here.

TopNews and Announcements

Bioethics Five-year impact factor: 1.731

The Five-year impact factor is measured in the same way as the regular impact factor, but across five years, thus providing a longer measurement of the value of research. The 171 articles published from 2003 to 2007 in Bioethics received a total of 296 citations in 2008. To determine the journal's Five-year impact factor for 2008, 296 is divided by 171, to give an impact factor of 1.731. The Five-year impact factor was introduced very recently by Thomson Reuters, and is available for 2007 and subsequent years.

Bioethics Online Open
Authors of articles in this journal can now choose to make their articles open access and available free for all readers through the payment of an author fee. Read more.

NEW Bioethics Book - The Bioethics Reader
A collection celebrating some of the best essays from the Blackwell journals, Bioethics and Developing World Bioethics.
Click here for further information and here to read an independent review!

Online Content Now Available Back to Volume 1
All back issues of Bioethics are available online. Click here to browse contents and abstracts. For further information on how to access these issues please visit our Librarian Site.

Online Submission
You can now submit your manuscripts to Bioethics online at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/biot.
Please ensure that you select manuscript type 'Special Issue' if submitting for one of the Special Issues, and state which Special Issue you are submitting for in the covering text.

Ethxblog
Keep up to date with a new ethics blog - http://ethxblog.blogspot.com - updated daily by Udo Schüklenk, co-editor of Bioethics and Developing World Bioethics.

Free Access in the Developing World
Free online access to this journal is available within institutions in the developing world through the HINARI initiative with the World Health Organization (WHO).

NIH Public Access Mandate
For those interested in the Wiley-Blackwell policy on the NIH Public Access Mandate, please visit our policy statement.

TopHighlights

Top 5 Articles Downloaded from Volume 20 of Bioethics

Click on the hyperlinked article titles below.

Neuroethics
Walter Glannon

Returning Genetic Research Results to Individuals: Points-to-consider
Gaile Renegar, Christopher J. Webster, Steffen Stuerzebecher, Lea Harty, Susan E. Ide, Beth Balkite, Taryn A. Rogalski-Salter, Nadine Cohen, Brian B.Spear, Diane M. Barnes, Celia Brazell

Addiction and Autonomy: Can Addicted People Consent to the prescription of their drug of addiction?
Bennett Foddy, Julian Savulescu

Ethics and Infectious Disease
Michael Selgelid

Preparing for an Influenza Pandemic: Ethical Issues
Jaro Kotalik

Please click here to access the International Association of Bioethics website.

Please click here to access the Canadian Bioethics Society website.

TopEndorsements

The difficulty is to make the debates co-operative and constructive rather than simply clashes of propaganda, and Bioethics seems to me to make an uncommonly good shot at this difficult goal.
Mary Midgely, Nature

'The readability of most of the articles published is first class. '
Margaret Brazier, Times Higher Educational Supplement