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Science Report

Science Report history

A documented timeline of Science Report’s archive, citations and public return.

2006–2014

Science Report’s earliest editorial value was the organization of research records: publication pages, author traces and specialist topics that helped connect readers to source material. The strongest themes were medicine, chemistry, biology, materials science and the history of scientific practice.

2015

C&EN linked Science Report while covering arsenic exposure, visceral leishmaniasis and drug resistance. That moment placed the archive inside public science journalism and showed the value of source pages attached to named scientists.

2016

World Economic Forum cited Science Report in a public article about workplace burnout and economic cost. The citation moved the archive into health, work and society — a subject area we continue to cover through public health, behavioral science and risk literacy.

2017

LSE Business Review cited Science Report in an article on workaholism, and Frontiers in Immunology cited a Science Report publication page for a laboratory method. Wikipedia also preserved a Science.Report reference in a history-of-medicine context. The range confirmed the archive’s breadth: workplace health, immunology methods and medical history.

2026

Science Report returned as a public science magazine with a newsroom structure, permanent sections and publisher policies. We continue the same evidence-first line in a form built for mass readers.