The "Himalayan Journal of Nursing and Midwifery" (HJNM) is dedicated to advancing evidence-based nursing, midwifery, and healthcare by disseminating high-quality research and scholarship of contemporary relevance. It aims to contribute to the advancement of knowledge for practice, education, management, and policy within these fields.
The journal covers a wide range of topics within nursing, midwifery, and healthcare, including but not limited to:
- Adult Nursing
- Advanced Practice Nursing
- Clinical Nursing
- Cognitive Informatics
- Collaboration with physicians
- Community Health Nursing
- Confidentiality and Data Security
- Critical and emergency care
- Critical Care Nursing
- Emergency Nursing
- Family Nursing
- Gerontological nursing
- Health Care Delivery
- Health Care Research
- Home health nursing Community and Home care
- Information Technology in Nursing
- Innovations in Patient Care
- Involvement with patients adherence to treatment regimen
- Learning disability nursing
- Management and organizational issues
- Maternity and Women health Nursing
- Medical Surgical Nursing
- Mental Health and Psychiatric Nursing
- Midwifery nursing
- Multi-Professional Practice
- Neonatal nurse
- Nephro-Urology Nursing
- Neurosciences Nursing
- Nurse Practitioner Updates
- Nursing and Health Care
- Nursing Education
- Nursing Ethics
- Nursing of people in acute care and long-term care
- Nursing Standards
- Obstetric Nursing
- Orthopedic Nursing
- Palliative and geriatrics nursing
- Patient Care
- Patient education and counseling
- Pediatric nursing
- Primary Care
- Psychiatric and mental health
- Public Health Nursing
The Himalayan Journal of Nursing and Midwifery aims to serve a diverse readership, including practicing nurses and midwives, managers and senior members of the nursing and midwifery professions, nurse educators and nursing students, as well as researchers in other disciplines interested in interdisciplinary collaboration. Papers published in Himalayan Journal of Nursing and Midwifery are cited in reviews of evidence and used by healthcare professionals, policymakers, commissioners, and service users to inform decision-making and practice.