Info and Registrations at: https://euromusculus2019.org
13rd Mediterranean PRM Forum Congress – Abstract Submission Extended
The Field of Competence of PRM Physicians – Part II
Following the edition of Part One of this e-book in 2014, we are happy today to introduce to all the colleagues of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine the new e-book named as Part Two. This e-book contains a part of the work done the last 4 years (2014-18)...
European Training Requirement for PRM
It is our pleasure to announce that the European Training Requirement (ETR) for Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine, proposed by the UEMS PRM Section & Board, has been officially approved by the UEMS Council on April 28th and is now available...
INTERNATIONAL ULTRASOUND COURSE 2018
The 8th International Ultrasound Course Euro/Belmusculus will take place at the Ghent University Hospital (Belgium) on October 9 – October 12, 2018. This biennial ultrasound course continues to be a major and anticipated event of musculoskeletal...
EURO-MUSCULUS – IX
This year EURO-MUSCULUS - IX is going to be organized in Milan (2-4 Nov 2018). The 3-day program comprises two simultaneous courses i.e. Basic and Advance. During the initial two days; while the participants will be studying the upper and lower limb joints in the...
IN MEMORIAM OF STEPHEN HAWKING – March, 14th 2018
“…we have a moral duty to remove the barriers to participation, and to invest sufficient funding and expertise to unlock the vast potential of people with disabilities. Governments throughout the world can no longer overlook the hundreds of millions of people with disabilities who are denied access to health, rehabilitation, support, education and employment, and never get the chance to shine.”
(Stephen Hawking, 2011)
Today is a sad day. The world has woken up missing Stephen Hawking.
For those who knew him, it seems hard to believe that the man who coped with a dreadful neurodegenerative disease since the age of 21, for more than 50 years, and succeeded in becoming one of the most authoritative scientists of our time, has eventually surrended to the common destiny of every human being.
For his academic colleagues, and for the readers of his popular books, Stephen Hawking was a recognized and valued genius due to his studies on the origins of the universe and the nature of black holes.
For those who knew the public image disclosed by the networks, he was a disabled person suffering from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, condemned by this progressive disease to the complete paralysis of the limb muscles and of muscles involved in speech, voice production, swallowing and ventilation.
The only picture we have seen, since many years, is a portray of him bound to a wheelchair, supported by special cushions, while looking at the screen of a tablet to communicate with the world through his eye movements.
Thanks to this unique residual movement, he has been able to dictate his books on a virtual keyboard and share with us the content of his brilliant thought.
In Memoriam of Prof. Alex Chantraine
It is with deep sorrow that we announce the passing away of Prof Alex Chantraine, honorary professor at the University of Geneva, Faculty of Medicine.