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Academic Emergency Medicine
Subject: Academic Emergency Medicine
Date: Sat, 20 May 2000 09:27:37 -0400 (EDT)
Academic Emergency Medicine
http://www.aemj.org/
(Link inactive 17 September 2008)
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/journal.asp?ref=1069-6563&site=1
(Link active 17 September 2008)
The Society for Academic Emergency Medicine and Hanley & Belfus are
pleased to announce that the full text of Academic Emergency Medicine is
now available online.
Academic Emergency Medicine, the official journal of the Society for
Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM), was established in 1994. It is a
monthly, peer-reviewed journal whose goals are to advance the science,
education, and clinical practice of emergency medicine; to serve as a
voice for the academic emergency medicine community; and to enhance the
goals and objectives of SAEM.
Academic Emergency Medicine online contains the full content of each issue
of the journal, including all figures and tables, beginning with the
January 1999 issue (Volume 6, Number 1). The full text is searchable by
keyword, and the cited references include hyperlinks to Medline and to the
online full text of many other frequently-cited journals. Abstract files
are online beginning with the January 1994 issue (Volume 1, Number 1).
Each issue will be placed online approximately on the date it is mailed to
subscribers; therefore the online site will be available prior to receipt
of your paper copy. The May 2000 issue (Volume 7, Number 5) is the latest
issue online, and the next issue is scheduled to be available online on
June 16. Online readers may want to sign up for the eTOCs (electronic
Table of Contents) service, which will deliver each new issue's table of
contents via email. In addition, the tables of contents of upcoming
issues will be placed online as "Planned Table of Contents for Future
Issues."
The web site also provides access to information about the journal (such
as Instructions to Authors, the Editorial Board, and subscription
information and subscription ordering), as well as access to the Society
web site.
There is currently a free trial period for access to Academic Emergency
Medicine, which will be available until November 2000. Subsequent to the
free trial, access to the full-text of articles will be available by
institutional license, which comes with all institutional subscriptions,
or individual subscription available to print subscribers or Society
members. All other access (e.g., to Abstracts, TOCs, searching,
Instructions to Authors) will remain freely available.
We very much encourage you to sign the guestbook on your first visit to
the site. This will take only a minute or two, and it will provide us
with helpful information about who the online readers are and how they are
connecting to the site. In addition, we would appreciate comments,
critiques, questions, or suggestions from you; these can be sent via the
Feedback link found on all pages of the site. Feedback from readers will
help us decide what new features would be most valuable for the site and
how well it is working for its readers.
The site is being produced in conjunction with Stanford University's
HighWire Press, which also works with other medical and research journals,
including these frequently-cited journals: Pediatrics, BMJ, Stroke,
Circulation, and Chest. You may find a list of online medical and
research journals and their URLs at:
http://highwire.stanford.edu or
http://intl.highwire.org
(Please forward this information to your colleagues who may
be interested in Academic Emergency Medicine.)
-----
John Sack, Director,
HighWire Press, Stanford University
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