Population Health Metrics Annual Awards pilot 🏆
Published in Healthcare & Nursing and Public Health
1. Early Career Researcher Reviewer Award 🏆
Purpose:
To recognise and support Early Career Researchers (ECRs) who consistently deliver high-quality, timely peer reviews.
Eligibility:
- Must meet ECR criteria: first research publication within the last 10 years (verified via Scopus or, where this does not exist, Google Scholar)
- Must complete 3 or more reviews in the calendar year
- Each review must be:
-
- Submitted within 2 weeks of invitation
-
- Of good quality, meaning:
-
- It offers thoughtful, detailed and constructive editorial feedback on the manuscript’s clarity, structure, and scientific contribution
-
- It reflects professional integrity, with references used appropriately and a clear focus on enhancing the work
Entry Process:
- Review invitations are sent via our manuscript handling system, SNAPP, using the Reviewer Finder, which suggests relevant reviewers based on Clarivate’s Web of Science database
- Editors will include a note about the award in the reviewer invitation
- Reviewers cannot self-nominate but are more likely to be invited again after submitting a good-quality review
Judging Process:
- The publisher will identify the reviewers who have completed 3 or more reviews in the year. The publisher will determine which of these reviewers meet the Early Career Researcher criteria by using Scopus, or, where this does not exist, Google Scholar.
- Eligible candidates will be ranked in descending order of the most reviews completed
- Starting with the Early Career Researcher who reviewed the greatest number of manuscripts that calendar year, the Editors-in-Chief will assess review quality and efficiency
- The ECR reviewer who submits the greatest number of good-quality, timely reviews over the calendar year will be announced as the winner
- In case of a tie, consistent engagement across the year will be prioritised (e.g., reviews spread out over the year rather than clustered into one month)
Rewards:
-
All entrants:
⭐A digital Early Career Reviewer Achievement Certificate
⭐ Name featured in our end-of-year awards blog and on the journal website
-
Winner:
⭐A digital winner’s Standout Early Career Reviewer Recognition Certificate
⭐ Q&A interview blog article with the Editors-in-Chief⭐Year-long mentorship with an Associate Editor or Editorial Board member (up to 3 meetings/year and support via email). Expand your network, receive manuscript feedback, gain editorial and career advice.
⭐ Opportunity to submit one pre-submission enquiry for direct assessment by the Editors-in-Chief, offering early guidance on manuscript suitability for Population Health Metrics
2. Editorial Board Reviewer Award 🏆
Purpose:
To honour Editorial Board members (mid-to-senior career) who demonstrate exceptional commitment to the journal by delivering high-quality, timely peer reviews.
Eligibility & Criteria:
- Must complete 3 or more reviews in the calendar year
- Reviews must meet the same quality and timeliness standards as the ECR award (above)
Judging & Entry Process:
- Follows the same process as the ECR award (see above)
Rewards:
-
All entrants:
⭐ A digital Editorial Board Reviewer Achievement Certificate
⭐ Name featured in our end-of-year awards blog and on the journal website
-
Winner:
⭐A digital winner’s Outstanding Editorial Board Reviewer Certificate
⭐Q&A interview blog article with the Editors-in-Chief
⭐Call with the Editor(s)-in-Chief: gain editorial and career advice
In addition to our public awards, we are proud to run a separate internal award that will also recognise excellence in manuscript handling by Associate and Guest Editors. Apply to be an Associate Editor here. While not publicly promoted, this initiative reflects our commitment to editorial quality across all roles.
Note: This is a pilot scheme. Processes may evolve in 2026 based on feedback and outcomes.
Follow the Topic
-
Population Health Metrics
Population Health Metrics aims to advance the science of population health assessment, and welcomes papers relating to concepts, methods, ethics, applications, and summary measures of population health.
Related Collections
With Collections, you can get published faster and increase your visibility.
Advancing the Measurement of Social Connection for Population Health: New Evidence, Metrics, and Global Priorities
Social connection is increasingly recognized as a vital component of population health. It includes the structure of social networks, the support that flows through relationships, and the quality of interactions that contribute to well-being. Research across multiple disciplines has established that limited or poor social connection is linked to higher risks of premature mortality, mental health problems, cardiovascular disease, cognitive decline, lower educational attainment, and reduced economic participation. These findings highlight the need for rigorous and comparable metrics that can illuminate the distribution, determinants, and consequences of social disconnection at scale.
Despite a growing interest in social connection, population level measurement remains uneven. Studies often rely on single items, short scales, or constructs that capture only one aspect of the broader social landscape. Loneliness, social isolation, and social support are frequently treated as interchangeable, even though each reflects a different dimension of social life and may influence health through distinct pathways. In many settings, there is no routine surveillance of social connection. As a result, policymakers and practitioners lack the data needed to design effective interventions or monitor changes over time.
Conceptual clarity is a prerequisite for measurement. Social connection is multidimensional and includes the size and diversity of social networks, the availability of emotional or instrumental support, and the positive or negative qualities of relationships. Social isolation is the objective absence of social roles or interactions. Loneliness is the subjective experience of wanting more or better connection than one currently has. These concepts intersect but are not synonymous. Accurate assessment requires tools that reflect each dimension and that can be adapted or validated across cultures, languages, and life stages.
Research from low and middle income countries is particularly limited even though many of these settings experience social conditions that may heighten vulnerability to social disconnection. Large and rapid demographic transitions, urban migration, changing family structures, economic insecurity, and exposure to conflict or displacement can all shape patterns of social connection. Yet most validated instruments originate in high income countries, and many have not been adapted or tested for linguistic, cultural, and contextual relevance in LMIC populations.
The need for strong metrics extends beyond conceptual work. The use of digital technology, demographic change, shifting household structures, migration, and urbanization all influence how social connections form and function. These forces create new opportunities for measurement, such as digital interaction data or innovative mixed-method approaches, but they also introduce new challenges. Measures grounded in one cultural or linguistic context may not translate easily to another. Children, adolescents, older adults, and marginalized groups may require tailored instruments that reflect their social realities. Community and policy interventions also need evaluation frameworks that capture both intended and unintended effects on connection.
This special issue invites research that advances the science of measuring social connection for population health. Relevant contributions include but are not limited to:
1. New conceptual models and frameworks for assessing social connection at scale
2. Validation or adaptation of measurement instruments across cultures and population groups
3. Methods for distinguishing between loneliness, social isolation, and social support in surveillance systems
4. Epidemiologic analyses that examine levels, patterns, and trends in social connection
5. Studies linking social connection metrics with health, economic, or educational outcomes
6. Approaches to integrating social connection into existing population health surveys
7. Measurement of social connection in digital and hybrid social environments
8. Evaluation metrics for policies, community initiatives, and individual level interventions
9. Proposals for harmonized indicators that support international comparisons
All submissions in this collection undergo the journal’s standard peer review process. Similarly, all manuscripts authored by a Guest Editor(s) will be handled by the Editor-in-Chief. As an open access publication, this journal levies an article processing fee (details here). We recognize that many key stakeholders may not have access to such resources and are committed to supporting participation in this issue wherever resources are a barrier. For more information about what support may be available, please visit OA funding and support, or email OAfundingpolicy@springernature.com or the Editor-in-Chief.
Publishing Model: Open Access
Deadline: Aug 28, 2026
Open Issues in Population Health Modeling: Methodological, and Epidemiological Implications of Continuous Changes in Population Dynamics
Among the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), SDG 3 focuses on ensuring healthy lives and promoting well-being for people of all ages, combating communicable diseases, lowering mortality rates from non-communicable diseases, and promoting mental health. Indeed, a sustainable society fundamentally depends on the number of years its members can actively contribute to social and economic activities, which requires living in good health. Therefore, the concepts of lifespan, longevity, and health are intrinsically crucial when evaluating and planning sustainability policies for both the short and long term.
In this context, socio-political decision-makers can greatly benefit from long-term estimates derived from methodological advancements in the demographic and health domains. Such advancements can fuel new perspectives and theories within their respective fields. The development and application of rigorous quantitative methods not only refine data interpretation but also foster a deeper understanding of underlying social, health, and population dynamics. These innovations enable researchers to challenge existing paradigms, paving the way for more robust theoretical developments in public health and population studies.
This Collection seeks cutting-edge articles that advance theories and evidence related to longevity and population health metrics. We particularly encourage research focused on elegant methods for measuring health dynamics and forecasting changes in longevity around the globe. Contributions that advance the state of the art in the field, while embracing rigorous methodological approaches, are highly welcomed.
This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 3, Good Health and Well-Being.
All submissions in this collection undergo the journal’s standard peer review process. Similarly, all manuscripts authored by a Guest Editor(s) will be handled by the Editor-in-Chief. As an open access publication, this journal levies an article processing fee (details here). We recognize that many key stakeholders may not have access to such resources and are committed to supporting participation in this issue wherever resources are a barrier. For more information about what support may be available, please visit OA funding and support, or email OAfundingpolicy@springernature.com or the Editor-in-Chief.
Publishing Model: Open Access
Deadline: Apr 30, 2026
Please sign in or register for FREE
If you are a registered user on Research Communities by Springer Nature, please sign in
Love this! Great initiatives, especially love the mentoring opportunity for ECRs