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EMWA is the European Medical Writers Association. EMWA is the network of professionals that represents, supports and trains medical communicators in Europe.

This website offers access to EMWA's journal, The Write Stuff (TWS), as well as our Freelancer and Company listing and our Jobs page advertising vacancies for both freelance and in-house medical writers and editors. If you would like more information about how to sign up to the freelancer or company list, or how to advertise your job vacancies on this website, please contact This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .

   
Want to know more about EMWA?

EMWA has just launch a new resource to promote its role as the network of professionals that represents, supports and trains medical communicators in Europe. ‘Paving the way: EMWA’s leadership in raising medical communication standards’ is a slide presentation that can be used as an excellent reference tool for anyone who wants to know more about EMWA, medical writing, skills required, membership benefits, etc. Both members and non-members are allowed to download this presentation and use it whenever they need. To read more, please click here.
 
   
Register for the ICR/EMWA Joint Conference

The next ICR/EMWA joint conference, entitled, 'Clinical trial documents: Joining the dots' will be held on Tuesday 14th September 2010 at Park Inn, Heathrow, London This one-day conference will focus on the interface between medical writers and clinical operations professionals.....To read more, please click here.
 
   
New online archive of The Write Stuff

We are now pleased to announce the launch of the new fully searchable online archive of EMWA’s journal The Write Stuff (TWS). The new archive has some exciting features....To read more, please click here.
 

 
Biomedical publishing in the internet age

During the recent EMWA conference in Lisbon, Iain Hrynaszkiewicz gave a plenary presentation on biomedical publishing in the internet age.
 
To see a PDF of Iain's slides, please click here.


Open access and online publishing: is the traditional print journal a thing of the past?

Over the last decade there has been a notable surge in the number of publishers offering open access to one or more of their medical journals. So with more and more journals transitioning to open access, what will the impact be for the more traditional journals, which offer their content through print and online only subscriptions, or by ‘pay per view’ for a particular article?

To read more, please click here.

 
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