Journal of the Center for Diagnostics and Telemedicine are indexed in Scopus
The scientific journal Digital Diagnostics, headed by the Center for Diagnostics and Telemedicine, is included in Scopus, a multidisciplinary and citation database. Digital Diagnostics contains original research, systematic scientific reviews, technical reports, case studies and other useful materials for the medical community in the field of diagnostics and digital technologies. Articles are published in three languages – Russian, Chinese, and English. For the Center, the journal is one of the key components of the system for organizing scientific activities.
The Scopus Content Selection Advisory Board (CSAB) reviewed and approved the application. The Commission stated that the content of the Digital Diagnostics journal is of great interest, publishing about 40 articles per year with established international citations. In accordance with current legislation, the inclusion of a journal in the Scopus database automatically equates the publication to the highest category K1 of the Higher Attestation Commission of Russia.
The journal has been publishing since 2020. The authors of the articles are leading Russian scientists, as well as foreign authors. The audience of the journal is scientists and doctors specializing in digital diagnostic methods: specialists in diagnostic imaging, cyberneticians, medical physicists, information technology specialists, as well as specialists in related areas. In total, nine issues and three special issues were released during this time.
The Center for Diagnostics and Telemedicine is a leading scientific, practical and telemedicine organization in the structure of the social development complex of Moscow and the Moscow Department of Health. The center has been responsible for improving the activities of the departments of radiological and instrumental diagnostics in the capital for 26 years. He specializes in the implementation of artificial intelligence technologies in medicine, the development of radiation diagnostics, the organization of the work of departments in medical institutions, including the telemedicine approach.