期刊名称:SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF WORK ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH

ISSN:0355-3140
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Bi-monthly
出版社:SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL WORK ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH, TOPELIUKSENKATU 41A, HELSINKI, FINLAND, SF-00250
  出版社网址:http://www.sjweh.fi/
期刊网址:http://www.sjweh.fi/
影响因子:5.024
主题范畴:PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

Facts about the Journal

[objective] [origin] [publishers] [contact information] [schedule of appearence] [supplements][impact factor] [open access] [distribution] [authors] [acceptance rate] [peer review] [lag time] [indexing]

Objective Top of the page

The aim of the Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health is to promote research in the fields of occupational and environmental health and safety and increase knowledge through the publication of scientific articles, reviews and other information of high interest in occupational health and safety. The topics of the Journal include the interactions between work and health, that is, subjects like occupational epidemiology, occupational health, occupational medicine, occupational hygiene and toxicology, occupational health services, work safety and ergonomics, and work organization. Currently, areas of high relevance are musculoskeletal disorders, workhours, mental health, job stress, return to work, and intervention research. In addition, studies related to economic evaluation and translational research (from the laboratory to practice) are valued.

The Journal also publishes short communications, case reports, commentaries, discussion papers, clinical questions, consensus reports, meeting reports, other reports, book reviews, news, and announcements (jobs, courses etc).


Origin Top of the page

The Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health is an international scientific occupational safety and health (OSH) periodical that was formed from the fusion of the publications known formerly as Work-Environment-Health and Nordisk Hygienisk Tidskrift. It has been published in English since 1 January 1975.

Until January 2013, Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health was published by the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health, the Danish National Research Centre for the Working Environment, and the Norwegian National Institute of Occupational Health.


Publisher Top of the page

The Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health is published by the Nordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH).

The journal is unique among its occupational health competitors in that it retains its publishing independence and is not owned or overseen by any commercial publishing house.


Contact information Top of the page

Address
Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health
Topeliuksenkatu 41 a A
FI-00250 HELSINKI
FINLAND
 
telephone: +358-30-474 2694
telefax: +358-(0)9-878 3326
e-mail: see the editors for specific e-mail addresses

Schedule of appearance Top of the page

The Journal appears bimonthly. Its publication dates are the first day of the following months: January, March, May, July, September and November.


Supplements Top of the page

Lengthy papers may be published as supplements, for example, dissertations and symposium papers. Supplements are peer reviewed and are generally supervised by a guest editor. The editorial office will supply further information upon request.


Impact factor and rankingTop of the page

For the latest available year, 2012, the impact factor of the Journal is 3.775. The five-year impact factor is 3.784. In the Journal Citation Report category of PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH, the Journal is ranked in the top 11% of all journals in the scientific edition and 4% of the social sciences edition.


Open accessTop of the page

The Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health is a hybrid journal, we publish both "locked" and open articles. We offer the possibility for accepted articles to be published as copyright-free open access papers. Once the open access option has been selected, the journal does not place ANY restrictions on how an article can be distributed or shared. It can be published on any data repository, photocopied, emailed or republished as long as the publication information (eg, Scand J Work Environ Health. 2013;39(1):1—4) is included. The review process and criteria for acceptability of a paper are the same for regular and open access articles. Authors can choose the open access option once a paper has been accepted.

All online first articles are open access until they go to print. There are several ways a published paper can remain open access:

  1. The author or his/her supporting institution pays the open access publication fee of EUR 1300.00. The page charge is waived when open access is purchased.
  2. The first author is affiliated with an organization that purchases the Open Access package for EUR 2000. The package provides online access to Scand J Work Environ Health AND free open access publication of papers of affiliated 1st authors. The page charge is NOT waived.
  3. The first author is affiliated with an organization that is a member of NOROSH. NOROSH has several levels of memberships that include a waiver of the article processing fee. See http://www.norosh.org/pmwiki.php/Main/Membership
  4. The Journal's Editor-in-Chief selects the paper as that issue's Editor's Pick.

Please note: Scand J Work Environ Health articles are "locked" for two years from the date of PRINT publication. If you have received funding that requires papers to be published open access before two years (eg, NIH or MRC funding), then you are required to purchase open access for the paper. The Journal can no longer "unlock" papers after publication or allow them to be posted on PubMed Central without a fee unless the paper is selected as the Editor's Pick.

Click here for more details.


Distribution Top of the page

The circulation of the Journal is worldwide. At the end of 2012, it was distributed to approximately 34 countries on 6 continents. Most of the subscriptions came from the United States, Netherlands, Canada, Finland, Germany, Italy, United Kingdom, Norway, Sweden, Spain, France, Australia, South Korea, Japan and Denmark.


Authors Top of the page

The Journal is open to all authors without regard to nationality. In 2012, 365 manuscripts were submitted for publication from all over the world.


Acceptance rate Top of the page

The acceptance rate of submitted manuscripts in 2012 was 7% by December 2012.At that time, 19 manuscripts were under consideration, 10 under review, and 5 new manuscripts had been received and were pending decision. The Journal is increasing the number of papers it publishes per issue in order to accept a higher number of quality papers currently being submitted.


Peer review Top of the page

In a peer-review process, one to four referees independently evaluate the scientific quality of the submitted manuscripts. The Journal uses a double-blind peer-review system.


Lag time Top of the page

Overall, our aim is to speed up the processing of papers and we pledge to do our best to provide all authors with an initial response within two weeks of submission and a (post peer-review) reply within eight weeks.


Indexing Top of the page

The Journal is indexed or abstracted in Thomson ISI (including Current Contents, the Science Citation Index, the Science Citation Index Expanded, Biological Abstracts, BIOSIS, and BIOSIS Previews), Excerpta Medica, OSH UPDATE (including CISDOC(E), HSELINE, and NIOSHTIC-2), PubMed, TZXLIRE, CAB Abstracts, Ebsco Host databases, ProQuest, CAS, Cambridge Scientific Abstracts (CSA/CIG), PASCAL database, National Archive Publishing Co, All-Russian Institute of Scientific and Technical Information (Viniti), Elsevier (Biographic Databases), SIIC Data Bases, Medworm, WorldCAT, Chemical Safety Newsbase, Global Health, PSYCINFO, CANCERLIT, Social Science, Pollution Abstracts, Uncover and ToxFile.


Instructions to Authors

Instructions for authors

Goals and content | General information | Open access | Page charge | Types of manuscripts | Preparation of manuscripts | Proofs | Reprints | Theme issues and supplements | Submission of manuscripts | Online Archiving Policy

Download instructions for preparing a paper for press.

Goals and content

The aim of the Journal is to promote research in the fields of occupational and environmental health and safety and to increase knowledge through the publication of original research articles, reviews and other information of high interest in occupational health and safety. The topics of the Journal include the interactions between work and health, that is, subjects like occupational epidemiology, occupational health, occupational medicine, occupational hygiene and toxicology, occupational health services, work safety and ergonomics, and work organization. Currently, areas of high relevance are musculoskeletal disorders, workhours, mental health, job stress, return to work, and intervention research. In addition, studies related to economic evaluation and translational research (from the laboratory to practice) are valued. The Journal also publishes short communications, case reports, commentaries, discussion papers, clinical questions, consensus reports, meeting reports, other reports, book reviews, news, and announcements (jobs, courses, events etc).


General information Top of the page

Papers are accepted on the understanding that they are contributed solely to the Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health and are subject to editorial revision. By submitting a manuscript, authors agree that the copyright for the manuscript is automatically transferred to the Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health at the time of its acceptance for publication unless the open access option is taken. A double-blind peer review process is used. The editors cannot enter into correspondence about papers that are rejected as being unsuitable for publication, and their decision is final.

All submitted papers should conform to the current update of the "Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals" (see: http://www.icmje.org), which is often referred to as the Vancouver style.


Open accessTop of the page

The Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health is a hybrid journal, we publish both "locked" and open articles. We offer the possibility for accepted articles to be published as copyright-free open access papers. Once the open access option has been selected, the journal does not place ANY restrictions on how an article can be distributed or shared. It can be published on any data repository, photocopied, emailed or republished as long as the publication information (eg, Scand J Work Environ Health. 2013;39(1):1—4) is included. The review process and criteria for acceptability of a paper are the same for regular and open access articles. Authors can choose the open access option once a paper has been accepted.

All online first articles are open access until they go to print. There are several ways a published paper can remain open access:

  1. The author or his/her supporting institution pays the open access publication fee of EUR 1300.00. The page charge is waived when open access is purchased.
  2. The first author is affiliated with an organization that purchases the Open Access package for EUR 2000. The package provides online access to Scand J Work Environ Health AND free open access publication of papers of affiliated 1st authors. The page charge is NOT waived.
  3. The first author is affiliated with an organization that is a member of NOROSH. NOROSH has several levels of memberships that include a waiver of the article processing fee. See http://www.norosh.org/pmwiki.php/Main/Membership
  4. The Journal's Editor-in-Chief selects the paper as that issue's Editor's Pick.

Please note: Scand J Work Environ Health articles are "locked" for two years from the date of PRINT publication. If you have received funding that requires papers to be published open access before two years (eg, NIH or MRC funding), then you are required to purchase open access for the paper. The Journal can no longer "unlock" papers after publication or allow them to be posted on PubMed Central without a fee unless the paper is selected as the Editor's Pick.

Click here for more details.


Page ChargeTop of the page

Due to restrictions on issue length, if an Original Research article or Discussion Paper is longer than 7-printed pages, the author must accept the responsibility for the cost of printing all pages in excess of this. Normally a 7-page article is about 4500 words including the references and abstract and about 3-5 normal-sized tables. The charges are: 8 pages = EUR 143, 9 pages = EUR 286, 10 pages = EUR 858, 11 pages = EUR 1144, 12 pages = EUR 2145 + 429 per additional page after 12 pages. If an author is unable to accept the cost, he or she should advise the Editorial Office. The page charge is waived for Reviews and when individual Open Access is purchased.


Types of manuscripts Top of the page

Original research articles

Original full paper/communication. These articles should report original research studies that are relevant to occupational and environmental health in a way that is accessible to readers of the Journal. A concise writing style is encouraged. Therefore, the average length of an article should be about 3000 words. If necessary, longer articles will be acceptable as well. However, the Journal has a page charge for articles exceeding seven printed pages.

Short communication. These articles report original data using a limited study question or a topic that can be reported concisely. The maximum length of a short communication is 1500 words and 2 tables or figures.

Reporting of original research articles. The Journal requires authors to follow a pertinent guideline from the current existing guidelines on the reporting of various study types (presented in the table below). If a randomized controlled trial is reported, authors should complete a CONSORT checklist and flow-chart and be prepared to submit it if requested. The Equator network of reporting guidelines provides a more extensive list of links and topics at www.equator-network.org. The Journal instructions provide further advice on format and layout of the manuscript.

Table: Guidelines for reporting original research articles.
Name of guideline Topic of guideline
STROBE Observational studies (1)
CONSORT Randomized controlled trials (2, 3)
PRISMA Systematic reviews and meta-analyses of intervention studies (4)
MOOSE Systematic reviews and meta-analyses of observational studies (5)
TREND Nonrandomized evaluations of behavioral and public health interventions (6)
STARD Diagnostic studies (7)
MIAME Microarray studies (8)
COREQ Qualitative studies (9)
  1. Vandenbroucke JP, von EE, Altman DG, Gotzsche PC, Mulrow CD, Pocock SJ, et al. Strengthening the reporting of observational studies in epidemiology (STROBE): explanation and elaboration. PLoS Med. 2007;4(10):e297.
  2. Altman DG, Schulz KF, Moher D, Egger M, Davidoff F, Elbourne D, et al. The revised CONSORT statement for reporting randomized trials: explanation and elaboration. Ann Intern Med, 2001;134(8):663-94.
  3. Consort Group. Consolidated standards of reporting trials [Internet]. Consort Group [cited 2 June 2008]. Available from: www.consort-statement.org
  4. Moher D, Liberati A, Tetzlaff J, Altman DG, The PRISMA Group. Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: The PRISMA Statement: PLoS Med 2009;6(7):e1000097.
  5. Stroup DF, Berlin JA, Morton SC, Olkin I, Williamson GD, Rennie D, et al. Meta-analysis of observational studies in epidemiology: a proposal for reporting: meta-analysis of observational studies in epidemiology (MOOSE) group. JAMA. 2000;283(15):2008-12.
  6. Des Jarlais DC, Lyles C, Crepaz N. Improving the reporting quality of nonrandomized evaluations of behavioral and public health interventions: the TREND statement. Am J Public Health. 2004;94(3):361-6.
  7. Bossuyt PM, Reitsma JB, Bruns DE, Gatsonis CA, Glasziou PP, Irwig LM, et al. Towards complete and accurate reporting of studies of diagnostic accuracy: the STARD initiative. BMJ. 2003;326(7379):41-4.
  8. Brazma A, Hingamp P, Quackenbush J, Sherlock G, Spellman P, Stoeckert C, et al. Minimum information about a microarray experiment (MIAME)-toward standards for microarray data. Nat Genet. 2001;29(4):365-71.
  9. Tong A, Sainsbury P, Craig J. Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ): a 32-item checklist for interviews and focus groups. Int J Qual Health Care. 2007;19(6):349-57.

Reviews

Systematic reviews. The Journal views systematic reviews as reports of reviews of the literature on specific questions relevant to occupational health and safety, and environmental health.  Therefore, a systematic review is characterized by a well-defined question, concrete inclusion and exclusion criteria, a systematic search of the literature, and well-defined methods of synthesizing the results from individual studies. A meta-analysis is defined as a systematic review that includes a statistical pooling of the results of individual studies.

Cochrane systematic reviews. The Journal invites authors of reviews that have been prepared under the aegis of the Cochrane Collaboration to submit their reviews. These studies will undergo a limited review process since they  have already gone through a rigorous review process. Because Cochrane reviews are only published in electronic format in the Cochrane Library, publication in a journal format is sufficiently different to allow publication also in the Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health. However, the reporting quality of the manuscript will be checked and commented upon.

Other reviews. The Journal prefers systematic reviews whenever such a review can be performed. When a systematic review is not feasible, for example, when the topic is more theoretical, nonsystematic reviews will also be considered. However, a search strategy and criteria for included studies will still be required.

Educational reviews. The Journal also invites authors to submit reviews of a specific approach to a problem in occupational or environmental health practice. This type of review can be a report of a guideline for occupational health professionals, a method for measuring exposure to a specific health hazard, or a preventive approach. We expect the author of an educational review to use at least an introduction and methods section in addition to the main text. The statements made about the approach or the management of the occupational health problem should be evidence-based. Therefore, they should be supported by references to appropriate evidence from scientific research.

Reporting of reviews. The Journal requires authors of systematic reviews on experimental studies to complete the PRISMA checklist and flowchart and be prepared to submit it if requested. When a meta-analysis of observational studies is carried out, authors should use the PRISMA checklist when possible, and, when not possible, the MOOSE checklist should be used.

Discussion papers

Research or practical questions relevant to occupational and environmental health can be presented with a free format in a Discussion Paper. These papers can, for example, suggest a new research area; they can also suggest a new approach in research or prevention or treatment practice in occupational health. Typically, a discussion paper presents the practical implementation, or possibilities for the implementation, of research results. Although the format of presentation is more flexible than that of a review, the approach should still be critical and scientifically valid.


Preparation of manuscripts Top of the page

Manuscripts should be in English and should be concise as possible without detracting from clarity. The abstract should be structured (maximum 250 words with the titles Objectives, Methods, Results and Conclusions). The acknowledgments should include credit for contributions that do not justify authorship, note of technical help, acknowledgment of financial and material support and disclosure of any relationships that may pose conflicts of interest (financial relationships with industry, affiliation with or involvement in an organization with a direct financial interest in the subject matter, etc). A list of the authors' contributions to the study (i.e., who did what) should be placed at the end of the article along with a 60-word summary of what is new in the paper/what are the policy implications of the paper. A maximum of seven printed pages is recommended for original articles, and the cost of printing all pages in excess of seven will be charged to the author.

Arrangement

Manuscripts should be typewritten, double-spaced (including references and tables), with wide margins. They should normally be divided into cover page [title; names by which each author is known; one academic degree per author; authors affiliations; address for correspondence and reprints (including telefax number and e-mail address); a 60-word summary of what is new in the paper/what are the policy implications of the paper and a running head of no more than 60 characters, along with the number of characters and words (not including tables or figure legends) and the number of tables and figures], abstract and key terms (no more than ten and none that are in the title), introduction, material (or study population) and methods, results, discussion, and references. Each section should begin on a new page. Possible acknowledgments should be placed between the discussion and the references, and any appendix should follow the references.

References

References should follow the style recommended by the "Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals" (see: Section IV.A.9.). They should be numbered consecutively in the order in which they are first mentioned in the text and identified in the text, tables, and legends by Arabic numerals in parentheses. Unpublished observations and personal communications cannot be used as references; they can, however, be mentioned in the text in parentheses. If a publication has six or fewer authors, all the authors are listed. If there are more than six, list the first six authors and add "et al".

Examples of typical reference entries:

  1. Schneider T. Improving exposure assessment requires measurements and modeling [editorial]. Scand J Work Environ Health. 2002;28:367-70.
  2. Ketola R, Toivonen R, Häkkänen M, Luukkonen R, Takala E-P, Viikari-Juntura E, et al. Effects of ergonomic intervention in work with video display units. Scand J Work Environ Health. 2002;28:18-24.
  3. International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). Reevaluation of some organic chemicals, hydrazine and hydrogen peroxide. Lyon: IARC; 1997. IARC monographs on the evaluation of the carcinogenic risks of chemicals to humans, vol 71.
  4. Deerasamee MS, Martin N, Sriplung H, Sontipong S, Sriamporn S, Srivatanatul P, et al. Cancer in Thailand; vol II (1992-1994). Lyon: International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). IARC technical report, no 34.
  5. Miettinen OS. Theoretical epidemiology in evolution, 1972-2002. In: Nurminen M, editor. 30 years of epidemiology for the benefit of occupational health: proceedings of the symposium, Sven Hernberg symposium. Helsinki: Finnish Institute of Occupational Health; 2002. p 25-9. People and work research reports, no 50.

For a more extensive list of examples see: International Committee of Medical Journal Editors Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals: Sample References. In addition, Citing Medicine: the NLM Style Guide for Authors, Editors and Publishers offers extensive coverage of how to cite references.

Tables

When submitting tables, place the tables at the end of the text after the reference list. Do not use tabs or macros in the table. All results sharing a column must be the same type of value (ie, percent, number, standard deviation etc). Do not place Mean and SD in the same column or OR and 95% CI together. Define all acronyms used in the table. Use alphabetical footnoting. Tables should be typed separately, numbered consecutively in Arabic numerals, and accompanied by a title. They should be constructed to fit in one or two columns of the Journal. To avoid blank spaces in tables the following symbols should be used: - = magnitude nil, 0 or 0.0 = number less than half the unit employed, · = category not applicable, ·· = data not available. All tables should be self-explanatory and should supplement the text, not duplicate it. The approximate location of the tables should be marked in the text. See sample tables for direction.

Figures

All illustrative material should be considered as figures and should accompany the text as separate copy. All figures should be mentioned in the text and numbered consecutively in Arabic numerals. Figure legends should be listed together on a separate sheet. One complete set of original figures should accompany the manuscript. The figures should be professionally drawn and photographed or originals (minimum size 127 × 173 mm, maximum size 203 × 254 mm). Letters, numbers, and symbols should be clear and of sufficient size that, when reduced to fit the columns of a printed page, each item will still be legible. All figures should be of the same proportions (ie, drawn and lettered to the same scale). Figures should be saved as PDF files. Color figures will be accepted at the special request of the author, who will then be responsible for paying the extra expenses incurred.


Proofs Top of the page

Authors will receive a PDF of their article for proofreading. They will be required to pay for any major alterations.


Reprints Top of the page

Reprints will be supplied if ordered and must be paid for.


Theme issues and supplements Top of the page

A group of papers focusing on a specific topic (ie, a series of 3 to 6 papers) can be published as a theme within a normal issue. When there is sufficient material, such papers can be published as a special issue or as a supplement of the Journal. Decisions regarding theme issues, special issues, and supplements, including their costs, are provided by the editor.


Submission of manuscripts Top of the page

Manuscripts should be submitted electronically in a Word file by accessing "E-submission" on the Journal's homepage (http://www.sjweh.fi) or directly starting with the following url: http://www.sjweh.fi/login.php. If there are any problems, consult the Journal's secretary, Johanna Parviainen ( johanna.parviainen@ttl.fi).

In the accompanying letter, the author should include a (i) information on prior or duplicate publication or on submission elsewhere of any part of the work, (ii) financial or other relationships that might lead to a conflict of interest, (iii) a statement that the manuscript has been read by all authors, that the requirements for authorship have been met and that each author believes that the manuscript represents honest work, and (iv) any other information that may prove useful to the editor (e.g., the type of article that the manuscript represents).


Online Archiving PolicyTop of the page

The Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health permits authors to archive their work in open access repositories as "pre-prints". Archiving of "post-print" (eg, the final published version) manuscripts is permitted with the following restrictions:

  • post-print manuscripts can be published only 2 years from the date of publication (ie, if the paper is published in May 2008, it can be deposited into the repository on May 2010.)
  • post-print manuscripts can be archived on author or institutional servers (incl PubMed Central) without permission after the 2-year embargo period expires, for other websites please contact the journal.
  • Publisher copyright and source must be acknowledged
  • the paper must link to the publisher version (Scand J Work Environ Health PDF). See our open access page for further information.

Editorial Board

Editors

 
Editor in chief
Mikko Härmä, Helsinki, Finland
 
telephone: +358-30-474 2729
telefax: +358-9-588 4759
e-mail: mikko.harma@ttl.fi
   
 
Assistant editor in chief
Eira Viikari-Juntura, Helsinki, Finland
 
telephone: +358-30-474 2511
telefax: +358-9-587 6256
e-mail: eira.viikari-juntura@ttl.fi

   
 
Associate editor
Alex Burdorf, Rotterdam, Netherlands
 
telephone: +31-10-463 8469
telefax: +31-10-408 9455
e-mail: a.burdorf@erasmusmc.nl

   
Associate editor
Jens Peter Bonde, Copenhagen, Denmark
 
telephone: +45-35-316 061
telefax: +45-35-316 070
e-mail: jbon0004@bbh.regionh.dk

   
Associate editor
Bengt Järvholm, Umeå, Sweden
 
telephone: +46-90-7852241
telefax: +46-90-785 2456
e-mail: bengt.jarvholm@envmed.umu.se

   
Associate editor
Göran Kecklund, Stockholm, Sweden
 
telephone: +46-8-524 820 50
telefax: +46-8-320 521
e-mail: Goran.Kecklund@ipm.ki.se; goran.kecklund@ki.se

   
Associate editor
Michiel A.J. Kompier, Nijmegen, Netherlands
 
telephone: +31 24 361 2639 / +31 24 361 2640
telefax: +31 24 361 5937
e-mail: kompier@psych.kun.nl
   
Associate editor
Petter Kristensen, Oslo, Norway
 
telephone: +47-23-195 373
telefax: +47-23-195 200
e-mail: petter.kristensen@stami.no

   
 
Associate editor
Hannu Norppa, Helsinki, Finland
 
telephone: +358-30-474-2347
telefax: +358 30 474 2110
e-mail: hannu.norppa@ttl.fi

   
   
Associate editor
Jos Verbeek, Kuopio, Finland
 
telephone: +358-30-474 7289
telefax: +358-30-474 7474
e-mail: jos.verbeek@ttl.fi

   
Managing Editor
Lisa O'Donoghue-Lindy, Helsinki
 
telephone: +358-30-474 2693
telefax: +358-9-878 3326
e-mail: Lisa.O'Donoghue-Lindy@ttl.fi
   
Office manager
Johanna Parviainen, Helsinki
 
telephone: +358-30-474 2694
telefax: +358-9-878 3326
e-mail: johanna.parviainen@ttl.fi

Editorial Board 2012

Maria Albin, Sweden
Birgit Aust, Denmark
Anssi Auvinen, Finland
John Axelsson, Sweden
Lars Barregård, Sweden
Debby Beckers, The Netherlands
Pier Alberto Bertazzi, Italy
Jonas Björk, Sweden
Aaron Blair, USA
Birgitte Blatter, the Netherlands
Henrik Bøggild, Denmark
Paulien Bongers, the Netherlands
Massimo Bovenzi, Italy
William Burk, The Netherlands
John Cherrie, UK
David Coggon, UK
Wijnand Eduard, Norway
Nils Fallentin, USA
Maria Feychting, Sweden
Per Gustavsson, Sweden
Dick Heederik, the Netherlands
Johnny Hellgren, Sweden
Maila Hietanen, Finland
Bjørn Hilt, Norway
Ari Hirvonen, Finland
Kirsti Husgafvel-Pursiainen, Finland
Kristina Jakobsson, Sweden
Antti Karjalainen, Finland
Timo Kauppinen, Finland
Kristina Kjaerheim, Norway
Stein Knardahl, Norway
Anders Knutsson, Sweden
Manolis Kogevinas, Spain
Henrik Kolstad, Denmark
Riitta-Sisko Koskela, Finland
Päivi Leino-Arjas, Finland
Marja-Liisa Lindbohm, Finland
Hester Lipscomb, USA
Arne Lowden, Sweden
Thomas Lund, Denmark
Ritva Luukkonen, Finland
Elsebeth Lynge, Denmark
Antti Malmivaara, Finland
Joseph McLaughlin, USA
Helena Miranda, Finland
Giovanni Moneta, UK
Kirsten Nabe-Nielsen, Denmark
Nancy Nelson, USA
Karen Nieuwenhuijsen, the Netherlands
Mark J Nieuwenhuijsen, Spain
Karl-Christian Nordby, Norway
Palle Ørbaek, Denmark
Keith Palmer, UK
Sampsa Puttonen, Finland
Nel Roeleveld, the Netherlands
Roger Rosa, USA
Reiner Rugulies, Denmark
Mikael Sallinen, Finland
Markku Sallmén, Finland
Kai Savolainen, Finland
Frederieke Schaafsma, the Netherlands
Norbert Semmer, Switzerland
Rahman Shiri, Finland
Barbara Silverstein, USA
Svetlana Solovieva, Finland
Sabine Sonnentag, Germany
Susanne Svendsen, Denmark
Magnus Sverke, Sweden
Esa-Pekka Takala, Finland
Masaya Takahashi, Japan
Toon Taris, the Netherlands
Töres Theorell, Sweden
Kjell Torén, Sweden
Philip Tucker, UK
Tore Tynes, Norway
Finn Tüchsen, Denmark
Jussi Vahtera, Finland
Ludovic van Amelsvoort, The Netherlands
Allard van der Beek, the Netherlands
Jacques van der Klink, the Netherlands
Tinka van Vuuren, The Netherlands
Marianna Virtanen, Finland
Peter Westerholm, Sweden
Paolo Vineis, UK
Eva Vingård, Sweden


Referees who reviewed articles during the period 1 September 2011 — 31 August 2012.

Maria Albin
Johan Hviid Andersen
Han Anema
Anna Anund
Anna Arlinghaus
Bengt Arnetz
Karen Belkic
David Bellinger
Jonas Björk
Birgitte Blatter
Matteo Bonzini
Massimo Bovenzi
Sandra Brouwer
Sherwood Burge
William Burk
Hermann Burr
Henrik Bøggild
Ute Bültmann
Marcello Ceppi
Harvey Checkoway
David Coggon
Peter Croft
Paul Cullinan
Jon E Dahl
Anna Dahlgren
Tor Erik Danielsen
Angela de Boer
Martine C de Bruijne
Nele De Cuyper
Matt Egan
Kerstin Ekberg
Leo Elders
Achim Elfering
Kaj Elgstrand
Leslie Elliott
Bradley Evanoff
Jean-Baptiste Fassier
Nils Fallentin
Helene Garde
Finn Gyntelberg
Timo Hakulinen
Johnni Hansen
Hans-Martin Hasselhorn
Markku Heliövaara
Tarja Heponiemi
Bjørn Hilt
Ari Hirvonen
Sheilah Hogg-Johnson
Emily Hughes
Kirsti Husgafvel-Pursiainen
Michael Ingre
Lorentz M Irgens
Chris Jensen
Matti Joensuu
Helge Kjuus
Stein Knardahl
Anders Knutsson
Manolis Kogevinas
Henrik Kolstad
Johny Kongerud
Petra Koopmans
Paul Kuijer
Merete Labriola
Tea Lallukka
Ute Latza
Annette Leclerc
Constanze Leineweber
Marja-Liisa Lindbohm
Hester Lipscomb
David Lombardi
Veikko Louhevaara
Arne Lowden
Thomas Lund
Ingvar Lundberg
Freek Lötters
Ellen MacEachen
Kari-Pekka Martimo
Svend-Erik Matthiassen
Franco Merlo
Giovanni Moneta
Kirsten Nabe-Nielsen
Karen Nieuwenhuijsen
Karl-Christian Nordby
Merete Osler
Keith Palmer
Katharine Parkes
Timo Partonen
Tiina Paunio
Markku Peltonen
Beata Peplonska
Karin Proper
Sampsa Puttonen
David Rempel
Yves Roquelaure
Roger Rosa
Reiner Rugulies
Lesley Rushton
Lars Rylander
Mikael Sallinen
Simo Salminen
Paula Salo
William Shaw
Rahman Shiri
Arie Shirom
Barbara Silverstein
Timo Sinervo
Børge Sivertsen
Lawrence Smith
Karen Sogaard
Svetlana Solovieva
Stephen Stansfeld
Poul Suadicani
Magnus Svartengren
Susanne Wulff Svendsen
Kristin Svendsen
Magnus Sverke
Masaya Takahashi
Esa-Pekka Takala
Kristian Tambs
Antonis Targoutzidis
Toon Taris
Jane Frølund Thomsen
Emile Tompa
Allan Toomingas
Kjell Torén
Lill Trogstad
Philip Tucker
Jussi Vahtera
Dwayne Van Eerd
Simo Virtanen
Marianna Virtanen
Morten Waersted
K Walker-Bone
JianLi Wang
Peter Westerholm
Pascal Wild
Imelda Wong

Copyright © 2014 武汉大学图书馆 版权所有