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John King: The Oracle has Spoken

June 30, 2016

I stand on a cliff top and ask my dog to bark twice if it doesn’t want me to jump. It fails to bark so I jump. That is a […]

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Brexit0 Comments

David McCoy: Brexit, despondency, and hope

June 30, 2016

For many who work to promote the universal right to health, Brexit has brought despondency. While some people voted Leave on the back of democratic and progressive arguments, many who […]

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Brexit0 Comments

Soham D Bhaduri: The NEET-PG could be an opportunity to transform India’s medical education

June 29, 2016

The Indian government has seemingly assented to the NEET-PG (National Eligibility cum Entrance Test-Post Graduate) as a common exit cum entrance exam for those who’ve achieved their MBBS and want […]

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South Asia, Students0 Comments

Nicky Cullum: Brexit and nursing

June 28, 2016

The NHS does not have enough nurses and midwives with a vacancy rate for nurses of around 10% (and higher in London). The majority of NHS trusts have been actively […]

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Brexit0 Comments

Chris Ham: What can the NHS in England learn from Scotland?

June 28, 2016

I was in Glasgow recently speaking at the annual NHS Scotland conference. I took the opportunity to meet national and local leaders to discuss areas of common concern. Three programmes of […]

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The King's fund0 Comments

Martin McKee: Brexit and health—the confusion grows

June 27, 2016

When I wrote my last BMJ blog it was within hours of the result of the EU referendum. I admitted freely that, despite having studied the EU extensively for three […]

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Brexit, Martin McKee1 Comment

William Cayley: What happened? A US doctor on Brexit

June 27, 2016

What just happened? Sitting in my clinical office in rural Wisconsin, the outcome of the “Brexit” vote seems quite far away—yet the day after 23 June’s vote, the shock and surprise […]

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Global health, US healthcare, William Cayley0 Comments

Richard Lehman’s journal reviews—27 June 2016

June 27, 2016

NEJM  23 Jun 2016  Vol 374 Adolescent BMI: big data, little meaning 2430  “How might adolescent BMI affect adult cardiovascular mortality? In our study, we could not control for important […]

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Richard Lehman's weekly review of medical journals0 Comments

Reena Aggarwal: Are junior doctors going to vote for the new contract proposal?

June 27, 2016

Junior doctors are caught in a maelstrom; voting for or against a contract that is the best offer yet proposed, but with questions about its fairness, safety, and practical application […]

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Junior doctors, NHS0 Comments

Jeffrey Aronson: When I use a word . . . Medical patronymics

June 24, 2016

Of the different types of surname origins, patronymics are the most common. A patronym or patronymic (Greek πατήρ father + ὀνομα name) is a name that derives from the first […]

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Jeff Aronson's Words0 Comments

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