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Journal Photo for Sexual and Relationship Therapy
Peer reviewed only Open Access

Sexual and Relationship Therapy (SRT)

Publisher : Taylor & Francis
multidisciplinary psychosexual sexual health
e-ISSN 1468-1749
p-ISSN 1468-1994
Issue Frequency Quarterly
Impact Factor 1.5
Est. Year 1986
Mobile 4402070176000
Country United Kingdom
Language English
APC YES
Impact Factor Assignee Google Scholar
Email mtwist@antioch.edu

Journal Descriptions

Sexual and Relationship Therapy (SRT) offers a multidisciplinary forum for review and debate in the field of psychosexual and relationship therapies. It presents original research and best practice and is a vehicle for new theory, methodology, and application. We welcome contributions from a range of disciplines including: psychosexual and relationship therapy; sexual health and medicine; psychology; sexology; systemic family therapy; public health; sociology; counselling; medical ethics. Current Types of content include: original empirical articles; brief reports; theoretical essays; review articles (e.g., personal, clinical, literature, etc.); case studies; methodological articles; article commentaries; book and multimedia reviews; editorials.

Sexual and Relationship Therapy (SRT) is :-

  • International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Refereed, multidisciplinary, psychosexual, sexual health, psychology, sexology, systemic family therapy, public health, sociology, counselling, medical ethics, Clinical Psychology , Online or Print , Quarterly Journal

  • UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN P-ISSN: 1468-1994, E-ISSN: 1468-1749, Established: 1986, Impact Factor: 1.5
  • Does Not Provide Crossref DOI
  • Indexed in: Scopus, WoS

  • Not indexed in DOAJ, PubMed, UGC CARE

Indexing

Publications of SRT

Peer Briken March, 2015
Research on vaginismus has thus far not focused on the biography and sexual history of partners of women suffering from the condition. The aim of this study was to examine the sexual history...
James Dennis Fortenberry November, 2011
Orgasm is typically considered to be a sexual experience. However, orgasms occurring during physical exercise have been occasionally documented. The primary objective of the current study wa...