Quality in Primary Care Open Access

  • ISSN: 1479-1064
  • Journal h-index: 29
  • Journal CiteScore: 6.64
  • Journal Impact Factor: 4.22
  • Average acceptance to publication time (5-7 days)
  • Average article processing time (30-45 days) Less than 5 volumes 30 days
    8 - 9 volumes 40 days
    10 and more volumes 45 days
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Articles published in Quality in Primary Care have been cited by esteemed scholars and scientists all around the world. Quality in Primary Care has got h-index 29, which means every article in Quality in Primary Care has got 29 average citations.

Following are the list of articles that have cited the articles published in Quality in Primary Care.

  2024 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018

Total published articles

40 41 63 58 21 24 21

Research, Review articles and Editorials

20 33 13 22 11 9 18

Research communications, Review communications, Editorial communications, Case reports and Commentary

0 8 47 33 8 10 0

Conference proceedings

0 3 0 0 0 22 22

Citations received as per Google Scholar, other indexing platforms and portals

155 194 253 272 312 277 272
Journal total citations count 3516
Journal impact factor 4.22
Journal 5 years impact factor 7.36
Journal cite score 6.64
Journal h-index 29
Important citations

Rotar, A. M., Van Den Berg, M. J., Schäfer, W., Kringos, D. S., & Klazinga, N. S. (2018). Shared decision making between patient and GP about referrals from primary care: Does gatekeeping make a difference?. PloS one, 13(6), e0198729.

Murante, A. M., Seghieri, C., Vainieri, M., & Schäfer, W. L. (2017). Patient-perceived responsiveness of primary care systems across Europe and the relationship with the health expenditure and remuneration systems of primary care doctors. Social Science & Medicine, 186, 139-147.

Wong, S. T., Chau, L. W., Hogg, W., Teare, G. F., Miedema, B., Breton, M., ... & Wodchis, W. P. (2015). An international cross-sectional survey on the Quality and Costs of Primary Care (QUALICO-PC): recruitment and data collection of places delivering primary care across Canada. BMC Family Practice, 16(1), 1-10.

Lionis, C., Papadakis, S., Tatsi, C., Bertsias, A., Duijker, G., Mekouris, P. B., ... & Schäfer, W. (2017). Informing primary care reform in Greece: patient expectations and experiences (the QUALICOPC study). BMC health services research, 17(1), 1-13.

Cohidon, C., Cornuz, J., & Senn, N. (2015). Primary care in Switzerland: evolution of physicians’ profile and activities in twenty years (1993–2012). BMC family practice, 16(1), 1-9.

O’Malley, A. S., & Rich, E. C. (2015). Measuring comprehensiveness of primary care: challenges and opportunities. Journal of general internal medicine, 30(3), 568-575.

O’Malley, A. S., & Rich, E. C. (2015). Measuring comprehensiveness of primary care: challenges and opportunities. Journal of general internal medicine, 30(3), 568-575.

O’Malley, A. S., & Rich, E. C. (2015). Measuring comprehensiveness of primary care: challenges and opportunities. Journal of general internal medicine, 30(3), 568-575.

Bonciani, M., Schäfer, W., Barsanti, S., Heinemann, S., & Groenewegen, P. P. (2018). The benefits of co-location in primary care practices: the perspectives of general practitioners and patients in 34 countries. BMC health services research, 18(1), 1-22.

De Rosis, S., & Seghieri, C. (2015). Basic ICT adoption and use by general practitioners: an analysis of primary care systems in 31 European countries. BMC medical informatics and decision making, 15(1), 1-16.

Maisog, J. M., Li, W., Xu, Y., Hurley, B., Shah, H., Lemberg, R., ... & Gutfraind, A. (2019). Using massive health insurance claims data to predict very high-cost claimants: a machine learning approach. arXiv preprint arXiv:1912.13032.

Groenewegen, P. P., Greß, S., & Schäfer, W. (2016). General practitioners’ participation in a large, multicountry combined general practitioner-patient survey: recruitment procedures and participation rate. International Journal of Family Medicine, 2016.

Ng, S. H. X., Rahman, N., Ang, I. Y. H., Sridharan, S., Ramachandran, S., Wang, D. D., ... & Tan, X. Q. (2019). Characterization of high healthcare utilizer groups using administrative data from an electronic medical record database. BMC health services research, 19(1), 1-14.

Pavli?, D. R., Sever, M., Klemenc-Ketiš, Z., & Švab, I. (2015). Process quality indicators in family medicine: results of an international comparison. BMC family practice, 16(1), 1-11.

Miller, D., Gray, C. S., Kuluski, K., & Cott, C. (2015). Patient-centered care and patient-reported measures: let’s look before we leap. The Patient-Patient-Centered Outcomes Research, 8(4), 293-299.

Deverakonda, A. Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences.

Groenewegen, P., Heinemann, S., Greß, S., & Schäfer, W. (2015). Primary care practice composition in 34 countries. Health Policy, 119(12), 1576-1583.

rez BSc, S. G. P. (2014). Factors associated with patient satisfaction with primary care in Europe: results from the EUprimecare project. Quality in Primary Care, 22, 147-55.

Vimalavathini, R. (2019). CERVICAL CANCER-A REVIEW.

Schäfer, W. L., Boerma, W. G., Spreeuwenberg, P., Schellevis, F. G., & Groenewegen, P. P. (2016). Two decades of change in European general practice service profiles: conditions associated with the developments in 28 countries between 1993 and 2012. Scandinavian journal of primary health care, 34(1), 97-110.