The Johns Hopkins Medical Journal

The Johns Hopkins Medical Journal was a medical journal published by the Johns Hopkins University that ceased publication in 1982. It was established in December 1889 as The Johns Hopkins Hospital Bulletin. It was renamed Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital in 1924, before obtaining its final title in 1967. The journal is abstracted and indexed in Index Medicus/MEDLINE/PubMed.

Notable articles
The journal published several landmark papers. Examples are:
 * First description of what is now known as the Cushing reflex
 * First description of what is now known as Cushing's disease

Editors
The following persons have been editor-in-chief of the journal: • Henry Mills Hurd (1889–1906)

• Rupert Norton (1906–1914)

• Unknown (1914–1924)

• Wilburt C. Davison (1924–1927)

• Alan Chesney (1927–1929)

• Edward Cowles (1929–1935)

• Read Ellsworth (1935–1936)

• James Bordley (1936–1942)

• Maxwell Wintrobe (1942–1943)

• Luther Emmett Holt (1943–1944)

• Henry N. Harkins (1944–1947)

• Edward Cowles (1947–1949)

• Frederick Bang (1949–1953)

• Philip Wagley (1953–1955)

• E.K. Marshall, Jr. (1955–1958)

• Philip Wagley (1958–1962)

• Edward Stephen Stafford (1963–1970)