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The Lancet Global Health

About The Lancet Global Health

About the journal

Each monthly open access (subscription-free), online issue of The Lancet Global Health features original research, commentary, and correspondence. Our focus is on disadvantaged populations, be they whole economic regions or marginalised groups within otherwise prosperous nations, with a preference for the following topics: reproductive, maternal, neonatal, child, and adolescent health; infectious diseases, including neglected tropical diseases; non-communicable diseases; mental health; the global health workforce; health systems; surgery; and health policy.

All original research is subjected to The Lancet's usual rigorous standards of external clinical and statistical peer review, and edited by experienced technical editors to the highest standards. The journal is indexed/abstracted in MEDLINE/PubMed, Scopus, and in the Journal Citation ReportsTM.

Reputation and Impact

The Lancet Global Health has an Impact Factor of 21.597® (2019 Journal Citation Reports®, Clarivate Analytics 2020).

Information for Authors

Manuscripts must be solely the work of the author(s) stated, must not have been previously published elsewhere, and must not be under consideration by another journal. The Lancet journals are signatories of the Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing, and Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals, issued by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE Recommendations), and to the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) code of conduct for editors. We follow COPE's guidelines.

Article processing charges

No subscription or pay-per-view charges apply to any content published in The Lancet Global Health. In order to cover the costs of reviewing, copy editing, layout, and online hosting and archiving, the journal charges an article processing fee of $5000 upon acceptance of submitted research, reviews and health policy articles (no fee applies to Comment or Correspondence).

Authors whose main funder is located either in group A or B countries of the Health Inter Network Access to Research Initiative (HINARI) or in a country with a low UNDP human development index will be exempt from payment. For authors with no formal funding, the country of origin of the majority of authors' institutions will be taken as the source country. If there is no majority country, the corresponding author's country will be so designated.

The editorial decision to accept is taken well before any request is made as to the ability to pay. Payments are processed by a department unconnected to The Lancet Global Health's editorial department.

Copyright and reuse

All content is published under Creative Commons licensing, which enables authors to retain copyright while allowing others to copy, distribute, and make some uses of their work, provided full credit is given to them as originators. Authors will be offered a choice of two licences (CC BY or CC BY-NC-ND) depending on whether or not they wish to allow commercial reuse of their work and whether or not they wish to allow others to alter their work in the course of its reuse. Authors will be asked to sign a licence to permit our publisher, Elsevier, to publish the work in The Lancet Global Health.

Manuscript submission

To submit your manuscript to The Lancet Global Health please visit: http://www.editorialmanager.com/langlh

Publishing excellence

As trusted sources of information, the Lancet journals set extremely high standards for publishing, and we are committed to ensuring that our editorial processes meet our standards of excellence. From acceptance of your paper through to publication and beyond, our in-house teams of professional Editors, Assistant Editor, Illustrators, Production Editors, and Marketing and Communications experts can provide personal attention and guidance to strengthen the accuracy, accessibility, timeliness, and impact of your research.

About the Editorial team

Zoë Mullan is the Editor-in-Chief.

Zoë is an Ex-Officio Board Member of the Consortium of Universities for Global Health and an International Advisory Board member of Sun-Yat Sen Global Health Institute, Guangzhou, China. Between 2013 and 2017 she was a Council Member and Trustee of the Committee on Publication Ethics. She trained in Biochemistry at the University of Bath, UK, before joining the publishing industry in 1997 as a Scientific Information Officer with CABI. She moved to The Lancet in 1999, where she has worked since, variously as a technical editor, section editor, editorial lead for several global health Series and Special Issues, and founding editor of The Lancet Global Health.

Mandip Aujla is a Senior Editor.

Mandip joined The Lancet Global Health as Senior Editor in January 2019. After gaining a BSc in Biochemistry and Pharmacology from Kings College London she worked as an Assistant and Associate Editor at Nature Publishing Group before going on to study for an MA in Philosophy, Politics and Economics of Health at University College London. This led her to communications roles within the Department of Global Health and Development at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, the WHO Country Office for Bangladesh, and the Access to Medicine Foundation. Mandip has travelled to over 50 countries, speaks Punjabi, Urdu, and Hindi, as well as conversational Bangla and Dutch, and is currently learning Arabic. She is keen to increase the inclusion of low- and middle-income country experts in the global health discourse.

Kate McIntosh

Kate McIntosh is a Senior Editor.

Kate joined The Lancet Global Health as a Senior Editor in 2019, following her work as an Assistant Editor for The Lancet journals since 2017. Before joining The Lancet, Kate attained a BSc in Biology from the University of Bath, during which time she worked in labs at St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital (TN, USA) and the University of Monash (Melbourne, Australia), before completing a PhD on the cellular and molecular dysfunctions underlying a lethal embryonic disease at the University of Exeter. Kate has particular interests in reproductive and maternal health, neglected tropical diseases, health policy in LMICs, methods to improve population health monitoring and reporting, and the economic and logistical barriers to access to health care.

International Advisory Board

The Lancet Global Health's International Advisory Board members.

Ombudsman

Our ombudsman can: investigate delays in handling submitted manuscripts; discourtesy; failure to follow outlined procedures; failure to take reasonable account of representations to us by authors and readers; and challenges to the publishing ethics of the journal. If you have concerns about any of the above, please first contact an editor or the editorial inbox [email protected]; an editor will then respond to you (often, an editor can respond satisfactorily). If you remain dissatisfied with our response, please contact Malcolm Molyneux ([email protected])

Read more about the ombudsman and see our ombudsman's reports.

The Lancet Global Health Blog

An archive from the Blog can be found at: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/langlo/blog

The Lancet Group’s Diversity Pledge and No All-Male Panel Policy

Read the Diversity Pledge and No All-Male Panel Policy

November 2020
Volume 8, Issue 11