According to the 2011 census, approximately 400m of India’s 1.21bn population are “internal migrants.” These migrant communities in Indian cities constitute a large proportion of people living in urban slums. […]
Month: August 2015
Samir Dawlatly: Can you measure what is good about general practice?
The Health Foundation, at the behest of the government, is gathering thoughts from professionals and the public on the use of data to inform the quality of primary care until […]
The BMJ Today: Antibiotic prescribing and smoke free legislation
• GPs should consider delaying prescription of antibiotics, says NICE Data indicate that 90% of GPs feel pressurised into prescribing antibiotics to patients unnecessarily, according to a news story by Ingrid […]
Peter Brukner: The challenges for team doctors in professional sport
A recent incident in the English Premier League has highlighted the conflict of interest for doctors in professional sporting teams. In the final few minutes of a match between Chelsea […]
Joe Knight: Extreme weather and food supply shortages
It’s a given that Obama will never agree with Putin on Ukraine nor Ahmadinejad on nuclear proliferation. There are however, some common enemies that are supposed to draw the warring […]
The BMJ Today: Doctors’ salaries, football, and fossil fuels
• David Oliver: What should senior doctors be paid? In a column David Oliver hits out at politicians trying to “whip up outrage” at the pay of senior doctors, arguing that […]
Jeffrey Aronson: When I use a word . . . Backronyms
A backronym is not an acronym written backwards but one that is formed retrospectively. The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) gives two definitions: 1. An acronym formed from a phrase whose […]
The BMJ Today: The changing roles and responsibilities of UK general practice
The past few days have seen a number of proposed changes to the regulation, roles, and responsibilities of general practice within the UK, as well as a stark reminder of […]
Dominic Patterson: Why general practice
General practice is in crisis. Those are the first words on my site whygp.uk—launched in July along with the hashtag #whyGP—which aims to be a space for positive messages about […]
Samir Dawlatly: There is no dementia wonder cure
The daughter of one of my patients booked an appointment to see me*. She often came to see me about her father who had lived alone ever since his wife […]