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Month: December 2014

Yogesh Jain and Raman Kataria: The pathology of a public health tragedy

December 3, 2014

 Lessons from the Bilaspur sterilization camp  The recent deaths of 13 women in India operated on at a sterilization camp in Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh, has thrown up urgent questions on the delivery of […]

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Guest writers, South Asia7 Comments

Zosia Kmietowicz: Why don’t hospitals share test results?

December 3, 2014

My sister nearly died of pneumonia earlier this year. Exceptional NHS care saved her life. But I have been left flummoxed by the lack of communication during her illness and […]

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Editors at large, NHS0 Comments

The BMJ Today: Mediterranean diets and infant mortality

December 3, 2014

The Nurses ’Health Studies are long term epidemiological studies conducted on women’s health. They are among the largest investigations into risk factors for major chronic diseases in women ever conducted. Marta […]

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Georg Röggla, The BMJ today0 Comments

Joyce Lee: Social media, Google, and the internet are medical therapy

December 2, 2014

I have to thank my colleague @SusannahFox for alerting me to this Washington Post article—about a campaign by the government in Belgium to get people to stop Googling their symptoms. Check […]

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Patient and public perspectives0 Comments

Sanna W Khawaja: An NHS full of secret agents

December 2, 2014

While I enjoy the occasional spy movie, I always find myself irritated at the protagonist, who very often spends the film focused on a mission with little or no knowledge of […]

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Junior doctors, NHS, Students0 Comments

The BMJ Today: Relationships in medicine

December 2, 2014

Relationships are at the heart of medical practice. These relationships are built on trust and shared clinical, academic, personal, or economic goals. Two articles just published on thebmj.com explore ways to strengthen […]

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Patient and public perspectives, The BMJ today0 Comments

Kate Iorpenda: Adolescents are slipping through the cracks in HIV services

December 1, 2014

This year there has been considerable attention on adolescents and HIV, not least because of the World Health Organization’s “Health for the world’s adolescents” report, which highlighted how HIV is […]

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Global health1 Comment

Lawrence Haddad: Do we really need a nutrition data revolution?

December 1, 2014

The just released Global Nutrition Report makes the case for a “nutrition data revolution.” Data collection, storage, and analysis costs money—so why do we need to invest in it? Consider […]

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Global health0 Comments

Gill Morgan: NHS Providers’ programme for the next parliament

December 1, 2014

It’s rare for the NHS to be out of the headlines. From immediate winter pressures to the longer term challenges of promoting wellness and preventing illness, there is a continuous […]

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NHS0 Comments

Richard Lehman’s journal review—1 December 2014

December 1, 2014

NEJM 27 November 2014 Vol 371 2061 Antoine Bernard-Jean Marfan (1858-1942) was a French paediatrician who lived in the happy era of medicine when you could affix your name to […]

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Richard Lehman's weekly review of medical journals1 Comment
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