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Advancing Clinical Research

open access: yes
Advanced Science, EarlyView.
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Statistics in medical journals

Statistics in Medicine, 1982
AbstractThe general standard of statistics in medical journals is poor. This paper considers the reasons for this with illustrations of the types of error that are common. The consequences of incorrect statistics in published papers are discussed; these involve scientific and ethical issues.
exaly   +3 more sources

Indian medical journals

The Lancet, 1992
Although Indian doctors produce half the articles published from the third world, little has been written about Indian medical journals. We examined 75 of the 113 serious English-language journals published in India. Of the 22 included in the Cumulated Index Medicus only 8 were judged by Indian and foreign referees to be of international standard.
P, Sahni   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Medical Journals in China

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1990
About 500 medical journals are published in the People's Republic of China; circulations range from approximately 1000 to 130,000. Publishers include the Chinese Medical Association (which publishes the most heavily cited journals), the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, the Chinese Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine, publishing houses, and ...
B, Gastel, Y Q, Weng
openaire   +2 more sources

Statistics and the Medical Journal

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1985
Many clinicians first interact with statistics with enthusiasm when they need to make sense out of their own research observations. Until the encounter becomes "personal," statistics may remain a jumble of tedious number tasks, arcane terminology, and oddly sinuous logic (null hypotheses, degrees of freedom, two-tailed tests, etc).
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An Experiment in Medical Journalism

Archives of Dermatology, 1970
OVER the past 20 years there has been a steady increase in the quality of research in dermatology as well as in other fields of medicine. This has been attributable to many factors: more dermatology programs; more full-time individuals in dermatology; more financial support for dermatology especially in the form of training and research grants from the
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Are Medical Journals Obsolete?

Archives of Dermatology, 1977
The world of multimedia engulfs us. The medical profession has been particularly receptive to innovations in communications, including audiotapes and videotapes. Physicians eagerly embrace newer educational techniques such as the use of the computer as an integral element of workshops and lecture programs.
openaire   +4 more sources

Irish Medical Journals

Irish Journal of Medical Science, 2000
It is, perhaps, a fair conclusion to state that Irish medical journals flourished in the first half of the nineteenth century when Irish medicine was itself at the centre of the world stage. There were a number of remarkably able men who were actively involved in medical editing as well as notable medical discoveries.
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Medical Journals and Urgent Medical News

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1983
The Director of the Office of Health Policy Information in the Harvard School of Public Health, concerned with public anxieties about the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, has urged scientific journals to take various steps to speed scientific information along, both to the news media and to print in the journals themselves.
openaire   +2 more sources

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