Leaving the EU will damage health in this country where it was suffering the most before the pandemic, and where covid-19 hit it hardest, says Martha McCarey The UK definitively […]
Latest articles
Covid-19 highlights the world’s chronic shortage of life saving medical oxygen
Oxygen therapy is essential for treating severe covid-19 and numerous other conditions. However, for many patients, including women, children, and newborns, this essential treatment is unavailable, resulting in millions of […]
Richard Smith: A eulogy for trees and humanity
“Words strikes him as a ruse. His maize and beans and squash—all growing things alone disclose the wordless mind of God.” This doesn’t seem like a good place for a […]
Leave no one behind: prioritising inclusion health groups for covid-19 vaccination
The covid-19 pandemic has exacerbated long standing health inequalities experienced by socially excluded groups and without an inclusive approach to covid-19 vaccination these inequalities could be widened further by the […]
Conflicts of interest in the post Lansley NHS—from a regulated to an unregulated healthcare market?
The common perception of the UK government’s recent proposals on reforming the NHS announced in the recent Queen’s Speech is that it represents the moment when the government finally turned its back […]
Jeffrey Aronson: When I Use a Word . . . Pharmacological black swans 1970–2020
In his book The Black Swan (Random House, 2007), Nassim Taleb wrote “history does not crawl, it jumps”. Many important discoveries, he asserted, do not come about by careful planning; […]
The government’s poor handling of the covid-19 pandemic shows it is time to declare our limitations as well as interests
Admission of our limitations is crucial to good decision making, it is time we openly acknowledge these, says Amitava Banerjee In healthcare and health research, we spend a lot of […]
Alex Nowbar’s journal reviews—28 May 2021
Alex Nowbar reviews the latest research from the top medical journals […]
From music to medicine: Learning from our hobbies and each other
Covid-19 knocked communal hobbies on their head. My weekly community wind band rehearsals were banned and concerts cancelled. But learning from our hobbies can inform our clinical work. If you […]
The UK’s response to new variants: a story of obfuscation and chaos
The UK government’s response to the B.1.617.2 variant is, once again, characterised by complacency, dither, and delay […]