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Heart 2001;86:249; doi:10.1136/heart.86.3.249
Copyright © 2001 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & British Cardiovascular Society
Heart 2001;86:249 ( September )

Editorial

Getting Heart to developing countries

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

For some years now it has been the policy of the BMJ Publishing Group, which jointly owns Heart with the British Cardiac Society, to give gratis subscriptions to their journals to applicants from countries in the developing world. However, in practice this has had its difficulties. Many developing countries have either poor or non-existent postal services, and granting a print subscription can often be problematic and expensive---for example, the marginal cost of sending Heart to Africa is around £25 each year.

An editorial in BMJ has set out the arguments very clearly.1 We know that the gap between the rich and poor countries is widening. While those of us in the developed world have information overload, the developing countries have bare library shelves. The internet gives us the opportunity to narrow the gap.

The marginal cost of giving access to the electronic edition of Heart is much less than . . . [Full text of this article]


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