Clinical Hypertension: Impact Factor, Indexing, Publication Time & Fees


The Clinical Hypertension is reputed journal publishes research related to Medicine. The ISSN of the journal is 2056-5909.

Through this web page, researchers can check the indexing, publication fee, journal quartile, and journal aim & scope.

Clinical Hypertension: Details

Journal TitleClinical Hypertension
PublisherBioMed Central
Publication CountryCAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON, ENGLAND, N1 9XW
ISSN2056-5909
Publication AreaPeripheral Vascular Diseases
Publication LanguageEnglish
Review ProcessPeer review
Scopus IndexedYes

Clinical Hypertension Impact Factor

The Impact Factor of Clinical Hypertension in 2026 is 2.6.

Journal Quartile

The Clinical Hypertension is ranked in Q1.

Indexing

The Clinical Hypertension is indexed in: DOAJ, Scopus, Web of Science, PubMed, Embase, UGC CARE Group 2.

Publication Fee

The Clinical Hypertension does not charge any publication fee.

Publication Time

The Clinical Hypertension takes an average of 6 weeks to publish research papers.

Journal Official Website

The official website of the journal is https://clinicalhypertension.biomedcentral.com/.

Please visit only official website of the journal to submit research papers.



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