Visit the Research4Life login portal and log in using your institution's specific credentials.
Searching for vintage credentials like "Hinari Login Username Password 2013" is ineffective and risky for several reasons:
If you are currently trying to access HINARI, I can help you find: Resources for finding your institution's librarian Information on whether your country is eligible
The year 2013 was pivotal for Hinari for three reasons that directly affected login credentials: Hinari Login Username Password 2013
[Check Eligibility] ➔ [Register Institution] ➔ [Receive Official Credentials] Step 1: Verify Country Eligibility
Best practices then (and now)
Shared accounts from 2013 have been deactivated or systematically rotated to protect intellectual property. Visit the Research4Life login portal and log in
Using unauthorized or outdated login credentials is not just ineffective; it can disrupt access for the entire institution. HINARI (now part of Research4Life) monitors usage patterns to protect the partnership with publishers.
The World Health Organization and its publishing partners updated their authentication infrastructure to prevent unauthorized access.
Access is transitioning to Federated SSO security standards , enabling users to log in safely using their personal university email credentials. Legal Alternatives for Accessing Medical Literature HINARI (now part of Research4Life) monitors usage patterns
Authorized users must log in via the official Research4Life unified portal rather than older, program-specific Hinari pages.
The 2013 login portal looked significantly different from today’s unified gateway. Users typically encountered a simple HTML form asking for:
Using "leaked" or shared passwords from older sources (like those from 2013) is often ineffective because: