User login
With great pleasure I announce a partnership with the Association of Military Dermatologists (AMD) whereby Cutis® is the official journal of the organization. We welcome the AMD President Nicholas Logemann, DO, and the active members of the AMD—dermatologists in the Army, Navy, Air Force, and US Public Health Service—who provide laudable care to their charges in the United States and around the world.
The AMD strives to “[k]eep our troops fit to fight, take care of our wounded warriors on the field and back home, and provide quality Dermatologic care to their dependents, our retirees, and others in need of humanitarian assistance throughout the world when duty calls.” In addition to their clinical mission, members of the AMD have an educational mission by which they, at any one time, are training approximately 50 young active-duty physicians in dermatology residency training programs at their 3 sites in Bethesda, Maryland; San Antonio, Texas; and San Diego, California.
The value of this collaboration for the readers of Cutis is illustrated by the inaugural Military Dermatology column, “Managing Residual Limb Hyperhidrosis in Wounded Warriors: What Have We Learned?” This topic and others that will be featured in this new column, which will be published quarterly, will focus on an important area of skin disease that we may all see in our practices but an area in which AMD physicians have extensive expertise that they will share with us.
On a personal note, my dermatology training was in the US Public Health Service and I am an (inactive) member of the organization. I would urge all of our readers to consider supporting the mission of the AMD by visiting their website (http://www.militaryderm.org) and consider joining the organization, which accepts civilian members.
Vincent A. DeLeo, MD
Editor-in-Chief, Cutis
With great pleasure I announce a partnership with the Association of Military Dermatologists (AMD) whereby Cutis® is the official journal of the organization. We welcome the AMD President Nicholas Logemann, DO, and the active members of the AMD—dermatologists in the Army, Navy, Air Force, and US Public Health Service—who provide laudable care to their charges in the United States and around the world.
The AMD strives to “[k]eep our troops fit to fight, take care of our wounded warriors on the field and back home, and provide quality Dermatologic care to their dependents, our retirees, and others in need of humanitarian assistance throughout the world when duty calls.” In addition to their clinical mission, members of the AMD have an educational mission by which they, at any one time, are training approximately 50 young active-duty physicians in dermatology residency training programs at their 3 sites in Bethesda, Maryland; San Antonio, Texas; and San Diego, California.
The value of this collaboration for the readers of Cutis is illustrated by the inaugural Military Dermatology column, “Managing Residual Limb Hyperhidrosis in Wounded Warriors: What Have We Learned?” This topic and others that will be featured in this new column, which will be published quarterly, will focus on an important area of skin disease that we may all see in our practices but an area in which AMD physicians have extensive expertise that they will share with us.
On a personal note, my dermatology training was in the US Public Health Service and I am an (inactive) member of the organization. I would urge all of our readers to consider supporting the mission of the AMD by visiting their website (http://www.militaryderm.org) and consider joining the organization, which accepts civilian members.
Vincent A. DeLeo, MD
Editor-in-Chief, Cutis
With great pleasure I announce a partnership with the Association of Military Dermatologists (AMD) whereby Cutis® is the official journal of the organization. We welcome the AMD President Nicholas Logemann, DO, and the active members of the AMD—dermatologists in the Army, Navy, Air Force, and US Public Health Service—who provide laudable care to their charges in the United States and around the world.
The AMD strives to “[k]eep our troops fit to fight, take care of our wounded warriors on the field and back home, and provide quality Dermatologic care to their dependents, our retirees, and others in need of humanitarian assistance throughout the world when duty calls.” In addition to their clinical mission, members of the AMD have an educational mission by which they, at any one time, are training approximately 50 young active-duty physicians in dermatology residency training programs at their 3 sites in Bethesda, Maryland; San Antonio, Texas; and San Diego, California.
The value of this collaboration for the readers of Cutis is illustrated by the inaugural Military Dermatology column, “Managing Residual Limb Hyperhidrosis in Wounded Warriors: What Have We Learned?” This topic and others that will be featured in this new column, which will be published quarterly, will focus on an important area of skin disease that we may all see in our practices but an area in which AMD physicians have extensive expertise that they will share with us.
On a personal note, my dermatology training was in the US Public Health Service and I am an (inactive) member of the organization. I would urge all of our readers to consider supporting the mission of the AMD by visiting their website (http://www.militaryderm.org) and consider joining the organization, which accepts civilian members.
Vincent A. DeLeo, MD
Editor-in-Chief, Cutis