Indexing and Visibility
Journal of Aging Research And Healthcare (JARH) is committed to broad discovery and access. Our articles appear in major indexing services, academic search engines, repositories, and library catalogs that support global visibility for aging research.
Journal at a glance
ISSN: 2474-7785 | DOI prefix: 10.14302/issn.2474-7785 | License: CC BY 4.0 | Open access publishing.
Why indexing matters
Indexing ensures that aging research is searchable, citable, and accessible to clinicians, policymakers, and researchers. Visibility in recognized platforms supports citation growth, institutional reporting, and the translation of evidence into care systems.
JARH maintains structured metadata, DOI registration, and consistent formatting to improve discoverability across global search and library ecosystems. Persistent identifiers also ensure stable access for readers and long-term citation tracking. We also supply full-text metadata to discovery partners and maintain consistent journal branding to avoid citation fragmentation. This improves retrieval for systematic reviews and policy scans.
Primary indexing and recognition
- Research Bible: Journal profile
- IP Indexing: Academic indexing record
- ISSN registry: ISSN listing
- Open Policy Finder: Policy and access visibility across open science directories.
- SJI Factor: Impact profile
Repositories and social networks
Articles are available through major scholarly networks that increase readership and citations.
- Academia.edu
- ResearchGate
Example articles: End of life care in long term settings, Anti aging activity evaluation, Aged care industry review.
Academic search engines
- Google Scholar
- Semantic Scholar
Example articles: Type 2 diabetes in Mexican American elders, Osteoarthritis and social isolation, Osteoarthritis and frailty.
University libraries and catalogs
- The University of Queensland Library
- University of Birmingham
- University of Gothenburg Library
- University of Lincoln
- La Universidad de Alicante Library
Example listings: Osteoarthritis self management, Behavior management for depression in dementia, Alzheimer disease misconceptions.
Additional indexing platforms
JARH articles also appear in a range of indexing and discovery services.
- Research Bible and EuroPub
- ivySCI Database, Popline, and PubMed
- Global AuthorID, CHDC Makerere University, Colab, and Amanote Research
Example articles: Long COVID 19 and frailty, Osteoarthritis depression impacts, Person centered care model.
Metadata and DOI support
Every JARH article receives a DOI and standardized metadata to improve indexing accuracy. This includes structured titles, abstracts, keywords, and author affiliations that enhance discovery and citation tracking.
Authors can support indexing by using consistent terminology, reporting outcomes clearly, and ensuring references include DOI links when available. This also improves cataloging in university libraries. When possible, include standardized funding acknowledgments and clinical trial identifiers to support harvesting by indexing platforms.
Coverage updates
Indexing coverage can evolve as platforms update their records. If you need confirmation for a specific service, contact the editorial office with the article title and DOI so we can verify coverage quickly.
JARH continues to expand visibility by maintaining consistent metadata and partnering with discovery services that support aging research audiences. Updates are communicated as new platforms add coverage.
Author actions that help with indexing
Authors can improve indexing performance by using consistent keywords, standardized terminology for aging populations, and complete reference lists with DOI links.
Accurate author affiliations and ORCID IDs also improve indexing accuracy and citation tracking. Clear abstracts and structured headings further improve retrieval in academic search engines.
Need indexing confirmation?
Contact the editorial office for indexing verification or platform-specific queries.
Contact Editorial Office