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List of organizations involved in international emergency medicine[edit]

Name of Organization Abbreviation Founding Date Location of Founding Membership Conferences/Activites
American College of Emergency Physicians ACEP August 16, 1968[1] Lansing, Michigan[1] 32,000 people[2] Section on International Emergency Medicine[3]
Doctors Without Borders (Médecins Sans Frontières) MSF December 20, 1971[4] Paris, France 27,000 people
World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine WADEM October 2, 1976 Mainz, West Germany World Congress on Disaster and Emergency Medicine
International Medical Corps IMC September 1984 Chicago, Illinois
Society for Academic Emergency Medicine SAEM 1989 Lansing, Michigan International Emergency Medicine Interest Group[3]
International Federation for Emergency Medicine IFEM 1991 53 countries International Conference on Emergency Medicine[3]
Center for International EMS (1991) CIEMS 1991
American Academy of Emergency Medicine AAEM 1993 2400 international committee[3]
European Society for Emergency Medicine EuSEM May 1994 London, United Kingdom 200 people[3]
Asian Society of Emergency Medicine N/A October 24, 1998 Singapore 9 countries
American Academy for Emergency Medicine in India AAEMI February 2001 Monroeville, Pennsylvania
Pan Arab Society of Trauma and Emergency Medicine N/A 2002
Center for International EMS (2006) CIEMS 2006

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Suter, Robert E. (2012). "Emergency Medicine in the United States: A systematic review" (PDF). World Journal of Emergency Medicine. 3 (1). Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine, China: 5–10. Retrieved 10 September 2013.
  2. ^ "History of ACEP". American College of Emergency Physicians. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e Alagappan, Kumar; Holliman, C. James (2005). "History of the Development of International Emergency Medicine". Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America. 23 (1). W. B. Saunders Company. doi:10.1016/j.emc.2004.09.013. PMID 23423992.
  4. ^ Bortolotti, Dan (2004). Hope in Hell: Inside the World of Doctors Without Borders, Firefly Books. ISBN 1-55297-865-6.

Full Text Sources[edit]

Emergency Medicine in General: Yale Medical School, American Osteopathic Association

IFEM Source: President of Ireland's Speech, ER FAQ

International Journal of Emergency Medicine sources:

A review of published literature on emergency medicine training programs in low- and middle-income countries
A survey of the beliefs regarding international emergency medicine among fourth-year medical students planning on matching in emergency medicine
Creation and implementation of an emergency medicine education and training program in Turkey: an effective educational intervention to address the practitioner gap
Experience with the core curricular elements for international emergency medicine fellowships
Including emergency and acute care as a global health priority
Review article: Use of ultrasound in the developing world
Epidemiology of major incidents: an EMS study from Pakistan
The efficacy and value of emergency medicine: a supportive literature review
Characterizing emergency departments to improve understanding of emergency care systems

History of International Emergency Medicine, Another History of Emergency Medicine

Emergency medicine in:

South Africa: Emergency medicine in Paarl, South Africa: a cross-sectional descriptive study
India: AAEMI
Netherlands: EM Development in the Netherlands
Tanzania: Tanzania
European Union: WHO

Lots of EM Resources, WHO Assembly Resolution, IFEM Bulletin May 2013, IFEM and the Phillipines, Emergency medicine has come of age

Abstract only[edit]

Publication rate, EM Journal Growth, Another IFEM Initiative, WADEM, 5th Asia-Pacific Conference on Disaster Medicine

Pediatric Emergency Medicine: What's new in global pediatric emergency medicine?, Trends and challenges in international pediatric emergency medicine

South Africa: International EMS systems in South Africa--past, present, and future
Ethiopia: Emergency medical services capacities in the developing world: preliminary evaluation and training in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Development of Emergency Medicine as Academic and Distinct Clinical Discipline in Bosnia & Herzegovina
Vietnam: Source

Title only[edit]

Twitter use during emergency medicine conferences, The specialty of Emergency Medicine in an international perspective

Potential articles[edit]

International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine, EuSEM

History of the FA process[edit]

History Through 2008
Wikipedia:Featured articles/2012 RfC on FA leadership: request for comment from 2012 on Raul654's position as FA director
Wikipedia talk:Featured article candidates/archive59: see "Is there really a problem here we're solving?", ""Who is in charge of the clattering train?" (ack. E. J. Milliken)", and "RFC on governance of the FA forums"

Proposer of the FA process: Bmills (primary), Eloquence (secondary), Fuzheado (secondary) FA Director: Raul654 (August 2004-2011?)

Historiography[edit]

Most of the published works on Treblinka come from either from survivors of the August 1943 uprising or from historians of Jewish background.

The first estimate of the number of people killed at Treblinka came from Vasily Grossman, a Soviet war reporter who visited Treblinka in July 1944 as Soviet forces marched eastward across Poland. He published an article titled "The Hell Called Treblinka", which appeared in the November 1944 issue of Znayma, a monthly Russian literary magazine.[1]

  1. ^ Grossman 2005, p. 434.