Paramedicine
Paramedicine is a paramedic-led, international, peer-reviewed open access journal which aims to advance and transform the discipline of paramedicine through high quality evidence. It inspires robust discussion, encourages innovative thinking, informs leadership, and enables research translation.
Official Journal of the:
- Australasian College of Paramedicine
- Paramedic Chiefs of Canada
Journal Associates:
- Australasian Council of Paramedicine Deans
- Emergency Care Society of South Africa (ECSSA)
- McNally Project for Paramedicine Research
This journal is published on behalf of the Australasian College of Paramedicine. For more details on how to submit, see the Submission Guidelines.
Why publish in Paramedicine?
- Commitment to high quality rigorous standards
- Embraces diverse methodology
- Indexed widely, ensuring high visibility and discoverability
- Q2 (SJR 'EMS')
- High-quality and efficient peer review
- Free open access publishing
- Fast online publication
Open access article processing charge (APC) information
There is no charge for submitting a paper to the journal. The Australasian College of Paramedicine sponsors the journal by covering the article processing charge (APC) and making articles open access, thus there is no charge to authors for publishing their articles with the journal.
Submission information
Submit your manuscript today at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/paramedicine to be published in 2023.
Please see the Submission Guidelines tab for more information on how to submit your article to the journal.
Contact
Please direct any queries to editor.paramedicine@paramedics.org.
Paramedicine’s vision
To advance and transform the discipline of paramedicine through high-quality research dissemination and discourse.
Paramedicine’s mission
To deliver excellence in paramedicine through an international research forum that inspires robust discussion, enables research translation, encourages innovative thinking and informs leadership.
Aims and scope
Paramedicine is the official international journal of the Australasian College of Paramedicine. It aims to create a connected discourse that spans paradigms, methodologies and methods for the advancement of the Paramedicine profession, the public it serves, the systems it connects to, and the people tasked with enacting that service.
Paramedicine publishes research from any country investigating any area of paramedicine, including but not limited to clinical care, operations, systems, leadership, education, aeromedical & retrieval practice, tactical paramedicine, and community paramedicine.
Paramedicine embraces diverse research methodology and paradigms and encourages qualitative research.
Paramedicine accepts primary quantitative and qualitative research, mixed-methods research, structured reviews including systematic and scoping designs, research methods summaries, perspectives, commentaries and case reports. Editorials are through invitation only.
Associate Professor Paul Simpson PhD | Western Sydney University, Australia |
Adjunct Associate Professor Alan Batt PhD | Monash University, Canada |
Associate Professor Kathryn Eastwood PhD | Monash University, Australia |
Assistant Professor Walter Tavares PhD | University of Toronto, Canada |
Associate Professor Kingsley Agho PhD | Western Sydney University, Australia |
Ms. Suzanne Avis MPH | University of Sydney, Australia |
Associate Professor Jason Bendall PhD | University of Newcastle, Australia |
Associate Professor Kelly-Ann Bowles PhD | Monash University, Australia |
Dr. Mike Brady PhD | Welsh Ambulance Service NHS Trust, Wales |
Dr. Madison Brydges Ph.D. | University of Toronto, Canada |
Ms. Cheryl Cameron MEd | Monash University, Canada |
Dr. Lloyd Christopher PhD | Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa |
Associate Professor Niamh Cummins Ph.D | University of Limerick, Ireland |
Associate Professor Joseph Cuthbertson PhD | Monash University, Australia |
Dr. Philipp Dahlmann PhD | Deggendorf Institute of Technology, Germany |
Dr. Benjamin de Waal PhD | Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa |
Professor Elizabeth Donnelly PhD | University of Windsor, Canada |
Dr. Ian Drennan PhD | University of Toronto, Canada |
Dr. Michael Eburn PhD | Australian National University, Australia |
Adjunct Associate Professor David Fitzpatrick PhD | University of Stirling, Scotland |
Dr. Pieter Fouche PhD | University of Tasmania, School of Paramedicine, Australia |
Dr. Kim Kirby PhD | University of the West of England, Bristol, England |
Dr. Shane Knox PhD | University College Cork, Ireland |
Professor Veronica Lindström PhD | Departement of Nursing, division Ambulance Service region Västerbotten, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden |
Dr. David Long PhD | University of Southern Queensland, Australia |
Dr. Alex MacQuarrie PhD | Griffith University, Australia |
Dr. Sandy MacQuarrie PhD | Edge Human Performance Group, Australia |
Dr. Justin Mausz PhD | University of Toronto, Department of Family and Community Medicine, Canada |
Adjunct Associate Professor Alan Morrison MPET | University of Tasmania, Australia |
Dr. Graham Munro PhD | Charles Sturt University, Australia |
Dr. Navindhra Naidoo PhD | Western Sydney University, Australia |
Dr. Robin Pap PhD | Western Sydney University, Australia |
Dr. Tuija Rasku PhD | Tampere University, Finland |
Associate Professor Louise Reynolds PhD | Australian Catholic University, Australia |
Associate Professor Linda Ross PhD | Monash University, Australia |
Dr. Verity Todd PhD | Auckland University of Technology (AUT), New Zealand |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.