Copyright License
Clear licensing terms that protect author rights and accelerate open science reuse.
Journal at a Glance
ISSN: 2690-0904
DOI Prefix: 10.14302/issn.2690-0904
License: CC BY 4.0
Peer reviewed open access journal
Scope Alignment
Occupational health, industrial hygiene, exposure assessment, environmental epidemiology, workplace safety, and policy translation. We prioritize evidence that improves worker and community health.
Publishing Model
Open access, single blind peer review, and rapid publication after acceptance and production checks. Metadata validation and DOI registration are included.
All IJOE articles are published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license. This license allows broad reuse while ensuring authors receive proper attribution.
Authors retain copyright and grant IJOE the right to publish, distribute, and archive the work.
- Copyright ownership of the published article
- The right to reuse figures, tables, and text in future work
- Permission to deposit the final article in institutional repositories
- The ability to share the article on personal or lab websites
- Reuse, adapt, and build upon the work for any purpose
- Translate or incorporate content into training or safety materials
- Include the article in systematic reviews or meta analyses
- Text and data mining for research or policy insights
Reuse must include proper attribution to the authors, journal, year of publication, and DOI. Recommended attribution includes the article title, author names, journal name, year, and DOI.
- Link to the original article and DOI
- Indicate if changes were made
- Preserve citation details and author order
- Ensure all third party figures, instruments, and datasets have documented permissions.
- Confirm worker consent for identifiable photos or workplace images.
- State any limitations on derivative works or commercial use where applicable.
- Provide licensing statements for supplementary files and appendices.
- Clarify reuse rights for questionnaires or proprietary assessment tools.
- Include acknowledgement language for adapted exposure scales or surveys.
- Describe how multimedia or video materials are licensed and attributed.
- Confirm permissions for diagnostic images or monitoring device screenshots.
- State whether datasets are released under CC BY or alternative licenses.
- Document permissions for proprietary instruments or software outputs.
- List any embargo or access restrictions tied to third party content.
- Provide guidance on reuse of tables or charts in policy documents.
- Confirm reuse permissions for workplace safety training materials.
- Document worker privacy protections for reused case materials.
- Clarify rights for translated or adapted policy guidelines.
- State whether commercial reuse is permitted under CC BY.
- Ensure permissions for reproduced regulatory tables or standards.
- Provide attribution format for reuse of exposure or hazard algorithms.
- Clarify rights for reproducing incident investigation flowcharts.
- Clarify reuse permissions for standardized questionnaires or scales.
If your article includes third party figures, datasets, or copyrighted content, obtain permission from the rights holder and document it clearly. Materials not covered under CC BY should be labeled with appropriate credit lines.
For workplace photos, survey instruments, or proprietary exposure tools, provide explicit permission or licensing details.
Can I reuse my article in a thesis?
Yes. CC BY permits reuse with attribution.
Can I post the article on my lab website?
Yes. Authors may share the final published version.
Do I need permission to reuse figures?
Not if they are covered by CC BY and properly attributed.
IJOE is committed to rigorous, transparent publishing in occupational and environmental medicine. We emphasize reproducible exposure assessment, clear reporting of workplace and environmental context, and ethical compliance across all article types.
The editorial office supports authors, editors, and reviewers with clear guidance and responsive communication. For questions about scope or workflow, contact [email protected].
We encourage continuous improvement in reporting practices and share updates that help the community maintain high standards in worker health, environmental safety, and preventive medicine.
Questions About Licensing?
Contact the editorial office for guidance on copyright or reuse permissions.