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PREP is the acronym for the Pediatrics Review and Education Program. The continuing medical education journal, Pediatrics in Review, is one component of the PREP program.
The cost if an individual subscription depends on several variables: membership type, organization to which an individual belongs, and whether s/he decides to enroll in the complete PREP program or subscribe only to Pediatrics in Review. To learn more about enrollment/subscription options, visit the "Pediatrics Review and Education Program (PREP)" information pages.
At the present time, Pediatrics in Review online, in the absence of a print subscription, is available only to international subscribers. For a price quote, fax or e-mail your request to: AAP Division of Scholarly Journals and Professional Periodicals, (847) 228-5088 or prep{at}aap.org. Please include your name, address, telephone number and, if you are an AAP member, your AAP membership number.
Earning CME credits through Pediatrics in Review online is straightforward. After you have activated the online portion of your subscription, you will see a "Take the CME quiz" link from any article with CME associated. Click on this link and take the quiz. After you submit your answers, you will see the preferred responses highlighted in yellow and links to where these responses are in the article's text. Once you have taken all the quizzes for a particular issue, you can submit the issue for credit, and you will receive an email certificate of completion within minutes. You can also review the quizzes available to you and your status on any particular one at "My CME," which is your "CME home" for Pediatrics in Review. You must be a PREP or Pediatrics in Review subscriber by October 31, 2000, to be eligible to receive CME credit for 2000 materials. 2000 PREP/Pediatrics in Review material will be accepted for credit through December 2002.
Does it seem as if our home page and current issue never change? We publish new issues on the same schedule as the print edition. If you know that a new issue of the print journal has been published but don't see that issue appearing on the site you may be experiencing a caching problem. Please read "Is the journal getting stale?" for more information.
In some cases, author names containing accents and other diacritics and special characters are displayed incorrectly in the author index and table of contents. In these cases, the accented letters usually are dropped. Because these changes affect indexing of author names, you should avoid searching author names containing special characters until this problem is corrected.
The small pictures in the text of articles are called "thumbnails." They are supposed to be small enough to load quickly and large enough to get the general idea of what it is. (See the related question below.)
Pediatrics in Review Online supports a two-step expansion of thumbnail images. Clicking on a thumbnail displays a larger version of a figure as well as the complete text of the figure's caption. You don't need any additional software to view this medium-size image. See Viewing Figures for more details.
This reflects a problem in the setup of your image viewer. Please see Help with High-Resolution Image Viewing.
We considered reducing image sizes, but we found that we were unable to maintain sufficient quality in smaller images.
See the instructions in Pediatrics in Review Online Features.
Internet browsers are fairly capable image viewers, but not very capable image printers. However, we have available high-quality PDF versions of articles. See Help with Printing for more details.
We display a figure directly after the paragraph in which it is first mentioned. If an author chooses to label a figure "Figure 3" but refers to it in the text before Figures 1 or 2, the figures will appear out of order.
The tiny images are the only way for us currently to represent symbols that are not available in the standard HTML ISO-Latin-1 character set.
However, HTML standards are being developed which will allow us to represent at least some of these symbols without the use of "inline images". As reliable browsers which support those standards become available, we'll use fewer inline images for symbols and special characters.
This could have two causes: either you have Auto Load Images turned
off, or you have encountered an image which didn't get processed.
If you have enabled Auto Load Images and the image still doesn't
display, please send us Feedback
and we'll investigate the problem.
If you are having trouble, please take a look at our Help with Searching page.
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