For decades the Wilderness Medicine Newsletter has provided up-to-date information to pre-hospital and definitive care providers. Since becoming an on-line journal, the readership of the WMN has become international. Now the WMN has it’s own web site: www.wildernessmedicinenewsletter.com

Subscribers pay the same $15 a year subscription rate but have access to more than 165 articles from back issues as well as current issues. You can search the site either by category, or by key words making the Wilderness Medicine Newsletter site a much more useful reference for everything from reviewing splinting to the prevention and treatment of tropical diseases.
Check it out!
Like this:
Be the first to like this post.
Tags: SOAP Notes, Wilderness Emergency Medicine, Wilderness Medicine
This entry was posted on February 10, 2012 at 9:55 am and is filed under AMPLE History, Anaphylaxis, Barotitis externa, Cellulitis, chest trauma, Cholera, Ciguatera Poisoning, Cold injuries, Decompression Sickness, Diarrhea, Disaster Medicine, dislocated patella, dislocations, Dive Injuries, Dive Medicine, Emergency Medicine, Environmental Emergencies, Fish Handler's Disease, fractures, Frostbite, Fugu Poisoning, HACE, HAPE, Head Trauma, high altitude illness, Immersion foot, improvised splint, Infectious Disease, knee injuries, Lightning-Related Injuries, Manchineel Tree, Marine Medicine, Mountain Rescue, Musculoskeletal Injuries, Orthopedics, Patient Assessment System, Poisons, Posions, Raynaud's Disease, Rescue Plan, SCUBA Diving Injuries, SOAP note, Spinal Cord Injury Management, splinting, Sprained Ankle Bandage, Sprains & Strains, Survival, Travel Medicine, wilderness emergency medicine, Wilderness Medicine, wilderness medicine newsletter. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.