MEMBERS AREA MEMBERS AREA

Recent PDP Webinars

Topic: Copyright and Using Literature In Your Business
Hosted by: Greg Taylor, Copyright Agency
A recording of this webinar is available by logging in to the member area of the website


Topic: Navigating Unethical Publishing Practices: Predatory Journal and Paper Mills
Hosted by: Prof. Virginia Barbour and Prof. Jennifer Byrne




Recordings of previous webinars can be found in the Members Area for current members only.

Past DPD Webinars


The digital age has profoundly changed the way people engage with each other and the world. The rapid pace of information flow, the rise of social media influencers and the declining trust in governments and institutions requires a shift in the way the World Health Organization (WHO) communicates with key stakeholders and the support it provides to its Member States. In the Western Pacific Region, WHO is responding to this challenge and turning it into an opportunity though the Communication for Health (C4H) approach.  

C4H recognises the power of communication as a tool for health. The approach harnesses insights from social, behavioural and communication sciences to create more targeted, people-centred and impactful communication. 

The recording of this webinar is available in our Members Area to AMWA members.


Literature reviews often require you to find evidence outside peer-reviewed journal literature. 

PRISMA 2020 includes a requirement to find ‘other sources’, often for free, so where do you search? what types are of value? and how do you integrate these in your work?

Join Thelma Fisher, a Health Sciences Subject Librarian at the University of Otago, on Thursday October 14 2021 at 12:00pm AEDT/2:00pm NZDT to discover the answers to these questions. 

This webinar is supported by the University of Otago and is available to AMWA members at no cost ($20 for non-members).

AMWA Early Career Award Winner 2025!

Congratulations to Halimat Atanda, winner of the 2025 AMWA Early Career Award. 

The judging panel was impressed by the quality of her submission, 'Methylation Simplified'. One judge commented, “This was a thoroughly enjoyable and highly engaging read. The writer made excellent use of literary devices to explain complex concepts. The flow was good and it was written at an appropriate level for the intended audience.”

Read more Read more