Back to Top

Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes (JAIDS)

Publisher :

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (LWW)

Scopus Profile
Peer reviewed only
Scopus Profile
Open Access
  • HIV
  • AIDS
  • molecular biology
  • +2

e-ISSN :

1077-9450

Issue Frequency :

Monthly

Impact Factor :

2.9

p-ISSN :

1525-4135

Est. Year :

1988

Mobile :

4155974982

Country :

United States

Language :

English

APC :

YES

Impact Factor Assignee :

Google Scholar

Email :

jaids.editor@gmail.com

Journal Descriptions

JAIDS: Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes is the trusted, interdisciplinary resource for HIV- and AIDS-related information with a strong focus on basic and translational science, clinical science, and epidemiology and prevention. Co-edited by the foremost leaders in clinical virology, molecular biology, and epidemiology, JAIDS publishes vital information on the advances in diagnosis and treatment of HIV infections, as well as the latest research in the development of therapeutics and vaccine approaches. This ground-breaking journal brings together rigorously peer-reviewed articles, reviews of current research, results of clinical trials, and epidemiologic reports from around the world. JAIDS: Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes​ seeks to end the HIV epidemic by presenting important new science across all disciplines that advance our understanding of the biology, treatment and prevention of HIV infection worldwide.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes (JAIDS) is :

International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Refereed, HIV, AIDS, molecular biology, clinical virology, epidemiology , Online or Print, Monthly Journal

UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN - 1525-4135, E-ISSN - 1077-9450, Established in - 1988, Impact Factor - 2.9

Not Provide Crossref DOI

Indexed in Scopus, WoS, PubMed

Not indexed in DOAJ, UGC CARE

Publications of JAIDS

The HIV Continuum of Care for Adolescents and Young Adults Attending 13 Urban US HIV Care Centers of the NICHD-ATN-CDC-HRSA SMILE Collaborative

Background: Almost one-quarter of all new HIV diagnoses in the United States occur among persons aged 13–24 years. These youths have the poorest HIV care continuum (HCC) outcomes, yet fe...

HIV Continuum of Care for Youth in the United States

Background: Beneficial HIV treatment outcomes require success at multiple steps along the HIV Continuum of Care. Youth living with HIV are a key population, and sites in the Adolescent Med...

HIV Testing, Care Referral, and Linkage to Care Intervals Affect Time to Engagement in Care for Newly Diagnosed HIV-Infected Adolescents in 15 Adolesc...

Objective: To examine how the time from HIV testing to care referral and from referral to care linkage influenced time to care engagement for newly diagnosed HIV-infected adolescents. M...

Establish Your Own Journal Without the Expense!

OJSCloud offers a complete, free setup to get you publishing.

Start Your Free Journal!
free profile