Articles published in Journal of Tropical Diseases & Public Health have been cited by esteemed scholars and scientists all around the world. Journal of Tropical Diseases & Public Health has got h-index 21, which means every article in Journal of Tropical Diseases & Public Health has got 21 average citations.

Following are the list of articles that have cited the articles published in Journal of Tropical Diseases & Public Health.

  2022 2021 2020 2019 2018

Year wise published articles

59 46 45 50 32

Year wise citations received

297 302 311 237 186
Journal total citations count 1889
Journal Impact Factor 5
Journal 5 years Impact Factor
Journal CiteScore
Journal h-index 21
Important citations

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Feleke, Daniel Getacher, et al. "Intestinal parasitic infections and associated factors among street dwellers’ in Dessie town, North-East Ethiopia: a cross sectional study." BMC research notes 12.1 (2019): 262.

Kousoulis A. Public responses to infectious diseases outbreaks: the role of emotions (Doctoral dissertation, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine).

Alemu, Getaneh, Mezgebu Nega, and Megbaru Alemu. "Parasitic contamination of fruits and vegetables collected from local markets of Bahir Dar City, northwest Ethiopia." Research and reports in tropical medicine 11 (2020): 17.

Puplampu AD. Perceptions of University of Ghana Students about the Media’s Role in Educating the Public about the Ebola Virus Disease (Doctoral dissertation, University of Ghana).

Samuel, Fikreslasie, et al. "Soil transmitted Helminthiasis and associated risk factors among elementary school children in ambo town, western Ethiopia." BMC Public Health 17.1 (2017): 1-7.

Mubwandarikwa A. Tracking coverage of the 2014–2015 Ebola outbreak: the case study of News 24 and Times Live (Doctoral dissertation).

Mama, Mohammedaman, and Getaneh Alemu. "Prevalence and factors associated with intestinal parasitic infections among food handlers of Southern Ethiopia: cross sectional study." BMC public health 16.1 (2015): 1-7.

Ibiyo M, Adebayo O. THE ROLE OF THE MEDIA IN REPORTING EPIDEMICS IN NIGERIA.

Hailegebriel, Tamirat. "Prevalence of intestinal parasitic infections and associated risk factors among students at Dona Berber primary school, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia." BMC infectious diseases 17.1 (2017): 1-8.

Pickering L. A Tale of Two Epidemics: Similarities and differences between the media coverage of the Ebola crisis and HIV AIDS.

Charles SJ. The proactive and reactive roles of the United States for modern health threats.

Granerud HS. The 2014-2016 Ebola Epidemic in West Africa. How did cultural factors contribute to an escalation of the outbreak? (Master's thesis, UiT Norges arktiske universitet).

Satawedin P. Promotion versus Prevention: Regulatory Focus Theory and Ebola Virus Disease Discourse. BU Academic Review. 2018 Dec 17;17(2):154-72.

Czosnek HM. Responding to International Health Emergencies: Comparing the World Health Organization Response to Ebola and Zika.

Kapoor S, Dubey M. THE IMPACT AND ROLE OF MEDIA FOR PEACE AND HUMAN SECURITY DURING COVID-19 CRISES. Journal of Content, Community and Communication. 2020:210-8.

Vasudevan J, Alathur S. Health Fear Mongering Make People More Sicker: Twitter Analysis in the Context of Corona Virus Infection. InInternational Working Conference on Transfer and Diffusion of IT 2020 Dec 18 (pp. 327-338). Springer, Cham.

Miller DS, Bivens ND. Risk society in the age of pandemics: Disaster reporting in the media—Ebola and COVID-19. InCOVID-19 in International Media 2021 Aug 12 (pp. 234-248). Routledge.

Veglis A, Panagiotou N, Papika S. How the coronavirus pandemic has been covered by Greek media.

Oduniyi E, Gibbons B, Oh M, Agusto FB. Modeling ebola transmission dynamics with media effects on disease and isolation rates. InInfectious Diseases and Our Planet 2021 (pp. 257-279). Springer, Cham.