<H1> | <H2> | <H3> | <H4> | <H5> | <H6> |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
<H1> </H1> |
Healthcare Informatics Research
e-hir.org/
Healthcare Informatics Research (Healthc Inform Res, HIR), the official publication of Korean Society of Medical Informatics, is published twice a year, June 30 and December 31. It covers all fields of medical science including clinical research and basic medical science. The journal aims to communicate new medical information between medical personnels and to help development of medicine and propagation of medical knowledge. All manuscripts should be creative, informative and helpful for diagnosis and treatment of the medical diseases and for communication of valuable information about all fields of medicine.
/upload/thumbnails/t1-hir-2022-28-2-105.png |
/upload/thumbnails/hir-2022-28-2-112f1.jpg |
/upload/thumbnails/hir-2022-28-2-123f1.jpg |
Text content size | 8314 bytes |
Total HTML size | 60119 bytes |
Domain Age: Not Available
Created Date: Not Available
Updated Date: Not Available
Expiry Date: Not Available
E-hir.org desktop website speed is slow. Page speed is important for both search engines and visitors end.
Domains (TLD) | Status |
---|---|
e-hir.com | Query Failed |
e-hir.net | Query Failed |
e-hir.biz | Query Failed |
e-hir.us | Query Failed |
e-hir.info | Query Failed |
Domains (TLD) | Status |
---|---|
w-hir.org | Query Failed |
s-hir.org | Query Failed |
d-hir.org | Query Failed |
f-hir.org | Query Failed |
r-hir.org | Query Failed |
E-hir.org mobile website speed is slow. Page speed is important for both search engines and visitors end.
Server IP | Server Location | Service Provider |
---|---|---|
121.254.129.102 | South KoreaTimezone | LG DACOM CorporationOrganization |
Anchor | Type | Follow |
---|---|---|
Home | Internal Links | Dofollow |
Sitemap | Internal Links | Dofollow |
Contact us | Internal Links | Dofollow |
ABOUT | Internal Links | Dofollow |
Aims and scope | Internal Links | Dofollow |
Social
Social Data
Cost and overhead previously rendered this semi-public form of communication unfeasible.
But advances in social networking technology from 2004-2010 has made broader concepts of sharing possible.