Dalhousie Medical Journal
Dalhousie Medical Journal was launched in 1936 by medical students, published under the auspices of the medical students’ society, which was variously called the Dalhousie Medical Society, the Dalhousie Student Medical Society and the Dalhousie Medical Students’ Society. The journal published original papers by students and faculty, as well as opinion pieces, reviews, case studies, abstracts and alumni news. Dalhousie Medical Journal ceased publication between 1969–1995. Revived in 1996, it continues as a student-run, peer-reviewed biannual publication. Its open-access digital version is hosted by Dalhousie University Libraries Journal Hosting Service at ojs.library.dal.ca/DMJ
Collections in this community
Recent Submissions
-
Fundamentals
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Acute Osteomyelitis of the Ilium
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Letter from Professor Martin Silberberg to Dr. Ralph Smith
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
In Memoriam
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Did You Know?
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Cartoon
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Editorial
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Dalhousie Students' Medical Society
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Alumni News
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Sidelights on Early Medical Teaching
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Spontaneous Hypoglycemia
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Pneumolysis
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Do Statistics Lie?
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Front Matter
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Abstracts
(Dalhousie Student Medical Society, 1936-10) -
Book Reviews
(Dalhousie Medical Student Society, 1941-02) -
Abstracts
(Dalhousie Medical Student Society, 1941) -
Case Reports
(Dalhousie Medical Student Society, 1941) -
The Biochemistry of Burns
(Dalhousie Medical Student Society, 1941) -
Alumni News
(Dalhousie Medical Student Society, 1941)