This guide has been developed by the members of the Internet Society of Orthopedic Surgery and Trauma (ISOST) to serve as a self-guided tutorial to the Internet for orthopedists. Although there are many other guides available, we felt that a guide written by orthopedic surgeons specifically directed to the interests of fellow orthopedists would more directly address your needs than a general interest guide. This guide is an ongoing project and will be continually updated, in the way that only an Internet document can be. It will be highly hyperlinked, with orthopaedic-specific examples.
It is designed to allow you to choose the level of expertise and subject area that interest you at the time. We have tried to make your journey easier and more productive by teaching you about the tools you'll be using. We also want to give you some ideas about where you'll want to go on the Orthopaedic Internet. And when you're ready to start contributing to the orthopaedic knowledgebase on the Internet, we'll show you how you can get involved in our organization. For those of us in the global orthopaedic community the Internet is about a huge global conversation.
David Nelson, MD.
Editor-in-Chief
Note: The original guide was developed between 1999 - 2002. The concept of the Orthopaedist's Guide to the Internet lives strong in the Electronic Skills Pavillion at the AAOS Annual Meeting. The table of contents of the Orthopaedist's Guide to the Internet is provided below for historical purposes.
The Orthopaedist's Guide to the Internet is designed to provide an Orthopaedic Surgeon with self-teaching tools to improve his or her use of the Internet for obtaining orthopaedic information. Each persons information requirements and their current level of knowledge about the Internet are unique. So the Guide is structured in a many-layered way to allow users to pick out what they need.