The size of the Annual Meeting can be daunting to somebody attending for the first time. To help newcomers better prepare for all that the Annual Meeting has to offer, we asked somebody who attended their first meeting in 2014 for some advice on how…
The ACR organizes Annual Meeting sessions based on educational tracks that can help you identify the most relevant content based on specialty or area of interest.
Technology changes the way rheumatologists and their patients work, live, and view the world. So it’s no surprise that a new TechMed sub-track is being introduced at this year’s Annual Meeting.
The Association of Rheumatology Health Professionals will observe its 50th anniversary during this year’s Annual Meeting by celebrating the advancements in rheumatology treatment, care, and research since 1965.
The 2015 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting will bring more than 15,000 physicians, health professionals, and industry partners from more than 100 different countries together in San Francisco to learn more about the latest in rheumatologic research and care.
More rheumatology clinicians, researchers, health professionals, providers, vendors, and interest groups than ever before will gather in San Francisco this November for the ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting.
Attending a meeting that involves long-distance international travel requires careful planning and attention to a myriad of details, so the meeting must be attractive on many levels.
Abstracts are a major part of the research program at the ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting, and not just because there are more than 3,000 individual poster and oral presentations.
October 1 and full implementation of ICD-10 is just around the corner. The transition to ICD-10 is not just a simple update; it is a major revamping of diagnosis coding.