Ultraschall Med 2005; 26(1): 51
DOI: 10.1055/s-2005-865050
EFSUMB - Newsletter

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Editorial

Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
15 March 2005 (online)

 

With the arrival of the New Year comes a new volume of the European Journal of Ultrasound and the Annual Bumper Edition of Newsletter. This edition of the Newsletter brings together usual contributions from the Honorary Secretary, the President, the Chairman of the Publications Committee, the Secretary of Education and Professional Standards Committee and several other items of interest to members throughout Europe but writing this editorial made me ask the question what the function of a Newsletter really is. I hope it is to keep all 17,000 members informed about what is happening outside their own region and specialty and what is available in the way of professional development in ultrasound. All this information should be of interest to members of the Federation but I suspect that relatively few will read it. I wonder how many have read the bimonthly Newsletter provided last year within the EJU and on the website. Some will have read it in the EJU but very few on the website. I suppose the fact that increasing numbers of members now have the EJU as a part of their National Society subscription means that more than half the members of the Federation have the opportunity to read it in its paper version. The new updated website is more attractive than its predecessor and perhaps will be the gateway for many to obtain this information. There is really no shortage of space within the allocated pages for anything of interest to members and I would urge anyone with anything interesting to say to submit it to the Newsletter. If it is interesting to you it will probably be interesting to others in Europe. Most should be interested in what Lucas Greiner and Gianna Stanford have to say about the role of EFSUMB and its relationship to the rest of the world of ultrasound. In these days where many of us relate best to our own clinical subspecialty it is good to hear of developments elsewhere. It is amazing what you may be able to apply to your own work from a development in an entirely different one.

I hope that 2005 will see further increase in subscriptions to the EJU perhaps with other National Societies realising the value of the Journal and that those with ultrasound projects worthy of publication will continue to submit to the EJU which has shown substantial changes even in the last 12 months.

David Pilling

Editor Newsletter EFSUMB

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