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The African Journal of Emergency Medicine is a quarterly peer-reviewed open-access medical journal covering research in the field of emergency medicine, with a focus on Africa. The journal publishes research articles, reviews, brief reports of scientific investigations, and case reports as well as commentary and correspondence related to topics ...
The African Journal of Emergency Medicine (AfJEM) is the official journal of the African Federation for Emergency Medicine. [8] It is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes original research, reviews, brief reports, case reports, and commentary on topics related to scientific, ethical, social, and economic importance to emergency care in Africa.
Lee Alan Wallis is the South African Head of Emergency Medicine for the Western Cape Government, Professor and Head of the Division of Emergency Medicine at the University of Cape Town and Stellenbosch University, and the founding President of the African Federation for Emergency Medicine.
Pages in category "Emergency medicine journals" The following 30 pages are in this category, out of 30 total. ... African Journal of Emergency Medicine;
Academic Emergency Medicine: Emergency medicine research, education, and training: Society for Academic Emergency Medicine: English: 1989–present Academic Medicine: Academic medicine: Association of American Medical Colleges: English: 1926–present Acimed: Medical informatics: National Center of Information on Medical Sciences in Cuba ...
Emergency medicine is a specialty that was first developed in the United States in the 1960s. [4] For the United States, the high number of traffic and other accident fatalities in the 1960s spurred a white paper from the National Academy of Sciences; it exposed the inadequacy of the current emergency medical system and led to the establishment of modern emergency medical services. [5]
The Emergency First Aid Responder System Model, or EFAR System Model, was first published by Jared H. Sun and Lee A. Wallis in Emergency Medicine Journal in 2012, describing a system utilizing community members as first responders in low-resource settings to provide immediate basic care during medical emergencies until certified medical personnel arrive. [1]
IFEM has three levels of membership: full members, affiliate members, and ex officio members. [1]A full member is defined as "the leading national emergency medicine organization for physicians in a country in which emergency medicine is officially recognized as a medical specialty and where there also exists at least one recognized training program in emergency medicine."