Aims and Scope

Aims:

WebLog Journal of Infectious Diseases is an open access, multidisciplinary, double-blind, meticulously peer-reviewed online journal. Articles on any topic pertaining to the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of infections and STDs in people and animals, as well as associated molecular genetics, pathophysiology, and epidemiology, are accepted for publication in WebLog Journal of Infectious Diseases. Research findings from the fields of epidemiology, immunology, microbiology, and related fields are published in WebLog Journal of Infectious Diseases.

We publish insightful evaluations on any subject related to infectious illnesses and human health as well as original research that promotes changes in or sheds light on clinical practice related to infectious diseases. Publications that have the potential to change clinical practice or thought are what we prefer to publish. Anti-infective therapy, immunization, bacterial, viral, fungal, and parasitic infections, emerging infectious diseases, HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, and mycobacterial infections, infection control, infectious disease epidemiology, neglected tropical diseases, and travel medicine are just a few of the topics covered. We publish articles with the goal of influencing and promoting improvements in clinical practice and health policy in infectious disease-related areas of need.

Article types that can be accepted in WebLog Journal of Infectious Diseases include Case Blogs, Case Reports, Case Series, Clinical Images, Editorials, Letters to the Editor, Short Communications, Rapid Communications, Commentaries, Perspectives, Opinions, Mini Reviews, Systematic Reviews, Review articles, and Research Articles.

The Journal's Editorial Board is made up of devoted specialists from Infectious Diseases across the globe. Each member of the Editorial Board actively oversees and guides the evolution of the publication. An expert panel of reviewers who assess the caliber and substance of articles submitted for publication with the aim of distributing precise and useful scientific information forms the basis of the peer-review process.

Scope:

WebLog Journal of Infectious Diseases widely accepts manuscripts in the following areas, but is not limited to:

Emerging Infectious Diseases Diarrheal Diseases Fungal Infection Epidemiology and Infection Hospital Infection Hepatitis B Global Infectious Diseases HIV/AIDS Infection and Chemotherapy Infection Control Infection and Public Health Immunology Microbiology Infectious Diseases Obstetrics and Gynecology Genetics and Evolution Infectious Agents and Cancer Infection Prevention Meningitis Malaria Lower Respiratory Infections Measles Ophthalmic Inflammation and Infection Pertussis Pediatric Infectious Diseases Syphilis Transplant Infectious Disease Tropical diseases Tetanus Tuberculosis Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease Bacterial Infections Cross Infection Eye Infections Fungal Infections Focal Infection Gingivitis, Infectious Intra-abdominal Infections Laboratory Infection Ludwig's Angina Necrotizing Ulcerative Opportunistic Infections Parasitic Infections Pelvic Infection Pregnancy Complications Prosthesis-Related Infections Reproductive Tract Infections Respiratory Tract Infections Sepsis Sexually Transmitted Diseases Skin Diseases Soft Tissue Infections Suppuration Toxemia Urinary Tract Infections Wound Infection Pandemics Epidemics Emerging Diseases Clinical Virology Clinical Mycology Clinical Bacteriology Zoonotic Infections Airborne Disease Medical Bioinformatics for Infectious Diseases Biological Contamination Blood-borne Disease Coinfection Copenhagen Consensus Disease Diffusion Mapping Infectious Disease Dynamics Infectious Disease Eradication Diseases of the Organ System Pathology Neglected Diseases Nosocomial Infection Spatiotemporal Epidemiological Modeler (STEM) Threshold Host Density Tropical Disease Waterborne Diseases Foodborne Illness Globalization and Disease Human Microbiome Project Viral Infections Surveillance and Treatment Prophylaxis  of Diseases Therapy and Treatment of Infectious Diseases Epidemiology of Infection Pathogenic Viruses Pathogenic Bacteria Fungi Protozoa Multicellular Parasites Aberrant Proteins