PLoS Medicine for Handhelds

HandheldsForDoctors.com is creating a RepliGo version of PLoS Medicine, which you can download and read on your handheld computer for free.

See some sample pages. Learn more about RepliGo. Have further questions?

Before downloading, install the free RepliGo software, which lets you read the journal on your handheld.

Current Issue

   
Download version
  File Size
v.2(11) Nov. 2005 Browse contents   2.87 MB

Archive

Volume 2: 2005

  Browse inside
Download version
  File Size
(1) January 2005 Contents   1.71 MB
(2) February 2005 Contents   1.6 MB
(3) March 2005 Contents  

1.9 MB

(4) April 2005 Contents   2.03 MB
(5) May 2005 Contents   2.05 MB
(6) June 2005 Contents   2.02 MB
(7) July 2005 Contents   2.44 MB
(8) August 2005 Contents   2.16 MB
(9) September 2005 Contents   2.16 MB
(10) October 2005 Contents   2.68 MB

Volume 1: 2004

  Browse inside
Download version
  File Size
(1) October 2004 Contents   2.1 MB
(2) November 2004 Contents   1.2 MB
(3) December 2004 Contents   1.5 MB

PLoS Medicine is a peer-reviewed international and multidisciplinary medical journal (ISSN-1549-1277). It is published monthly, online and in print, by the Public Library of Science (PLoS), a nonprofit organization.

The copyright for the issue belongs, as it should, to the authors of the papers. The authors in PLoS Medicine retain the copyright to their articles and they have signed an open access license allowing unrestricted distribution of their work: you too can make as many copies of their articles as you like, provided you give the authors credit.

 

 

Why PLoS Medicine for Handhelds?

HandheldsForDoctors.com supports PLoS Medicine, and the Open Access movement.

The journal is published by the Public Library of Science, which also publishes other prestigious journals like PLoS Biology. All PLoS content and journals are available with an Open Access license. This means that anyone in the world can read any of the issues free of charge. That means that fellow researchers can learn about your research, clinicians can improve their practice through your discoveries, and patients can learn more about their illness.

All this is provided at no cost to the reader, meaning that biomedical knowledge can benefit more people than ever before.

This page prepared by Jeffery Loo