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Is Medical Conference Coverage for You?. AMWA DVC Freelance Workshop 12 April 2008 Maria B. Vinall. Objective. To provide an overview of an interesting area of medical writing To provide you with information to help you decide whether conference coverage is a fit for you. Types of Writing.
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Is Medical Conference Coverage for You? AMWA DVC Freelance Workshop 12 April 2008 Maria B. Vinall
Objective • To provide an overview of an interesting area of medical writing • To provide you with information to help you decide whether conference coverage is a fit for you
Types of Writing • Journalistic • Clinical/Scientific
Journalistic • Characteristics • Less detail • Mostly late breaking clinical trials • Not usually referenced • Liberal use of quotes • Often due same or next day • Focus on highlights
Clinical/Scientific • Characteristics • More detailed • Usually referenced • Compilations of several presentations from one or more sessions • Limited use of quotes • Generally due post conference • Focus on clinical applicability
Media Elements • “Live” and recorded interviews and webcasts
Types of Stories • Late breaking clinical trials • Selected updates • Features • News • Satellite sessions
Types of Organizations • General news • Society newspapers • Specialty medical tabloids • Medical web sites • Conference specialty • Pharmaceutical • Consumer publications • Wire services
Assignments • Pre-assigned by editor • Developed on site in conjunction with editor • Combination • On the fly • Depends on experience
Work Load • Depends on the client and the percentage of their coverage you’ve been assigned to handle • My typical assignment: • 6500 - 8000 words per conference, which is • 7-10 stories of varying length), or, • about 13 pages of text • Usually one 750-1000 word article due in 5 days after close of conference with balance due in 10 days
Work Load • One news magazine requires the following for dedicated coverage: • Three days of coverage, • 3 to 5 stories per day, • 50% due on site, • balance due one week to 10 days, • Average word count per story 500 -700
Timelines • On site • Usually the day of presentation but some extend to 24 or 48 hours (rare) • Mostly journalistic • Usually require interview with presenter • Post Conference • Depends on deadline for the publication • Can vary from 5 days to a month
Skill Set • Interviewing • Speed • Time management • Flexibility • News judgment • Initiative • Statistics • Writing short • Science background • Accuracy • Persistence • Note taking • Quick thinking • Stamina
Skill Set • “The ability to sit in darkened rooms listening to boring talks for hours without falling asleep or at least without snoring too loudly” • Roueche http://medmeeting.blogspot.com
Tools of the Trade • A high quality digital camera that can be used without a flash • A good digital recorder that • can be set to either dictation (for interviews) or meeting (for sessions) • allows you to download to your computer • Lots and lots of batteries • A laptop
Payment • Per project • Per diem • Per story • Per word • Combination • Expenses
Registration • Press • Free BUT requirements vary from conference to conference • Attendee • Can be costly
Registration • Typical Requirement for Press Registration • Journalists • Assignment letter on the letterhead of the news organization being represented • Media identification (such as an international accredited press pass), or a business card issued by a recognized news organization. • Freelance Journalists • Copies of three bylined cardiology-related articles • An official letter of assignment from an accredited news organization. • Freelancers who do not have 3 bylined articles are not eligible for registration.
Registration • +’s of press registration • Access to all of the materials in the press room (press releases, handouts, meals!!) • Access to embargoed material • Access to press room personnel to arrange interviews • Interview rooms • Quiet place to work • Quiet place to get off your feet • Opportunity to network with colleagues • -’s of Press Registration • Exhibitors are not permitted to speak with the press
Add-on Responsibilities • Obtaining presenter review • Requesting permission to use slides • author’s own • published • Reference checking
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly • Good • Access to the most current medical information • Networking opportunities for future work • Pays relatively well • Travel • Improves your writing skills
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly • Bad • Demanding work with short timelines • Travel, though at times interesting, can also be exhausting, especially foreign travel • Technology failure • Last minute schedule changes • Accents
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly • Ugly • Last minute cancellations • 12 hour working days • Ego issues • Web casts that never show up • Major technology failure
Links • http://medmeeting.blogspot.com • A medical conference blog • As described by the blogger “An opinionated, occasionally cranky, occasionally snarky blog on medical meetings from the viewpoint of a medical journalist.”
More Links • http://www.medscape.com/welcome/conferences • http://www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/ • www.trends-in-medicine.com • http://www.docguide.com/crc.nsf/web-bySpec • http://www.hittmedicalwriting.com/
Thank you for your attention • Questions?
Some Ads from The HittList • We will be covering the ECCMID meeting in Barcelona next month. We have secured one writer but need another for our project. • ECCMID, Barcelona, Spain • 19th - 22nd, APR. • http://www.akm.ch/eccmid2008/ • Masahiro MatsumotoMedical News & Conference Systems, Inc.Planning & Sales Divisionmatsumoto@mncs.co.jp
We need two local freelance writers for the May 16-21 meeting of the American Thoracic Society in Toronto. • Please let me know. Thanks.mzittel@dothenpress.com