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Health Education Monographs (HEM)

Publisher :

Sage Publications, Inc.

Scopus Profile
Peer reviewed only
Scopus Profile
Open Access
  • Education
  • Public Health
  • Medicine & Allied Health
  • +2

e-ISSN :

2692-1553

Issue Frequency :

Bi-Monthly

p-ISSN :

0073-1455

Est. Year :

1957

Mobile :

4402073248500

Country :

United Kingdom

Language :

English

APC :

YES

Impact Factor Assignee :

Google Scholar

Email :

UKInfo@sagepub.co.uk

Journal Descriptions

The journal was established in 1957 as Health Education Monographs which was produced on an occasional basis with no set publishing schedule until 1974, when it became a quarterly publication with standard volume numbering and pagination.[1] The first issue of 1974 became volume 2, issue 1. All previous issues covering issues 1 to 36, from 1957 to 1973, were designated to constitute volume 1. During this period, Health Education Monographs was printed by various small publishing companies or cooperatively by SOPHE and the World Health Organization. No volume was published in 1979 due to extensive ongoing changes, including a new publisher, editor, and format.[1] In 1980, the journal was renamed Health Education Quarterly and a publication agreement was negotiated with Human Sciences Press.[1] John Wiley & Sons became the publisher with volume 10 in 1983 and the journal changed to its present publisher, SAGE Publications, in 1995. In 1997, the journal expanded to six issues annually to accommodate the growing volume of submissions and was renamed Health Education & Behavior.[1]


Health Education Monographs (HEM) is :

International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Refereed, Education, Public Health, Medicine & Allied Health, Health Sciences, Social Sciences , Online or Print, Bi-Monthly Journal

UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN - 0073-1455, E-ISSN - 2692-1553, Established in - 1957, Impact Factor

Not Provide Crossref DOI

Indexed in Scopus, PubMed

Not indexed in WoS, DOAJ, UGC CARE

Publications of HEM

Prevalence of condom use errors and problems among Indiana rural men: a telephone survey

This exploratory study compared selected HIV/STD-related risk variables (sexual behavior, condom use, STD diagnosis, and beliefs) between adults who grew up in a rural area and those who gre...

Is growing up in a rural area associated with less HIV/STD-related risk?: a brief report from an internet sample

This exploratory study compared selected HIV/STD-related risk variables (sexual behavior, condom use, STD diagnosis, and beliefs) between adults who grew up in a rural area and those who g...

  • dott image January, 2003

Motivation of self, partner, and couple to use male condoms: Associations with condom use errors and problems

The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between motivation to use condoms and prevalence of condom use errors and problems among heterosexual university students. A total o...

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