Emma Cartwright describes how having to pay for health services has given her more control over her care […]
Month: January 2019
Protecting patient privacy and security while exploiting the utility of next generation digital health wearables
The announcement that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) have given clearance to the irregular rhythm notification feature in the latest Apple Watch has been met with great enthusiasm by […]
Ian Leistikow: The three stages of safety improvement
At an international Roundtable Meeting that BMJ hosted in Riyadh in 2018, speakers from nations with very different cultural backgrounds, came to the similar conclusion that healthcare needs a culture […]
Abraar Karan: Doing things for no reason in the hospital
Many of the things we do as doctors continue simply because “that’s the way we’ve always done it,” says Abraar Karan […]
Nick Scriven: Ongoing winter pressure in the NHS
There have been numerous descriptions of the winter of 2017/18 in both the medical and national press. It was acknowledged by all that it was probably the worst in terms […]
Anna Olsson-Brown: The benefits of QI are numerous and the challenges worth overcoming
Clinical audit has long been a feature of clinical training for junior doctors, so I expected time to be set aside in which we could do it. However, the reality […]
Caution needed over ambitions for new primary care networks
It is critical that PCNs are not set up to fail by taking on too many tasks too quickly […]
Jeremy Taylor: Financial interests of patient organisations
Conflicts of interest should be disclosed, but should not be the occasion for excluding patients […]
The challenges of developing healthcare quality measures based on ICD-10-CM Codes
Inappropriate outpatient antibiotic prescribing is a primary driver of antimicrobial resistance. Designing and evaluating antibiotic stewardship initiatives requires common measures of inappropriate prescribing that can be applied at the level […]
David Melzer: Haemochromatosis is linked to more disease than previously thought
The long story of this research paper probably starts with my wife’s grandfather, Owen Tracy. He was a submariner in the First World War and was fit enough to climb […]