《英国医生杂志》.2004年.第5期
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- Bush plans to screen whole US population for mental illness
- Bush plans to screen whole US population for mental illness
- Treatment of minor burns
- Treatment of minor burns
- Treatment of minor burns
- Social class and elective caesareans in the NHS
- Social class and elective caesareans in the NHS
- Social class and elective caesareans in the NHS
- Fine needle aspiration of hepatic colorectal metastases
- Fine needle aspiration of hepatic colorectal metastases
- Fine needle aspiration of hepatic colorectal metastases
- Fine needle aspiration of hepatic colorectal metastases
- Ethical review of research into rare genetic disorders
- Photo-onycholysis associated with the use of doxycycline
- Change in suicide rates for patients with schizophrenia in Denmark, 1981-97: nested case-control study
- Randomised controlled trial assessing the impact of a nurse delivered, flow monitored protocol for optimisation of circulatory status after
- High hopes for cannabinoid analgesia
- Government confirms second case of vCJD transmitted by blood transfusion
- Fertilisation authority rules in favour of embryo selection for tissue donation
- Combination anticoagulation therapy doubles risk of bleeding in patients at high risk of stroke
- Bush signs law to protect US from bioterrorism
- Research ethics paperwork: what is the plot we seem to have lost?
- Better support for investigators is essential
- Bureaucracy of ethics applications
- View from the research and development office
- Obstacles to conducting epidemiological research in the UK general population
- Burns reconstruction
- Abnormal liver function found after an unplanned consultation: case presentation
- Corticosteroids for HELLP(haemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, low platelets) syndrome
- Advice to parents has limited effect—where next?
- Impact of counselling on careseeking behaviour in families with sick children: cluster randomised trial in rural India
- Life expectancy in Great Britain rises—but later years are still spent in poor health
- Childhood exposure to smoke may increase risk of back pain in later life
- WHO uses work on tuberculosis in Lima as model for tackling AIDS
- Rape victims in Sudan face life of stigma, says report
- Sexually transmitted diseases continue to rise
- Scandals have eroded US public's confidence in drug industry
- Doctors are not scientists but we still need science
- Campaign to revitalise academic medicine
- Campaign to revitalise academic medicine
- Hope of prevention training in South Asia
- Good news is often ignored
- Bush plans to screen whole US population for mental illness
- Report calls for more care for people wanting to die at home
- WHO wants more palliative care for Europeans
- In brief
- Health experts warn of disease as worst flooding in years hits Bangladesh
- Does the cannabinoid dronabinol reduce central pain in multiple sclerosis? Randomised double blind placebo controlled crossover trial
- Indian doctor's decision to "self test" AIDS vaccine decried as unethical
- New minister to tackle Poland's healthcare crisis
- New US Medicare policy changes ruling that obesity is not an illness
- "Arm's length" NHS bodies to be abolished in spending cull
- Health secretary cuts number of targets in a move to local health plans
- Audit report criticises India's slow progress on AIDS
- Canadian RCTs to have new registration rules
- French surgeons are set to strike
- Polypill debate continues
- Polypill debate continues
- Stress and exacerbations in multiple sclerosis
- Quality of randomised controlled trials
- Quality of randomised controlled trials
- Quality of randomised controlled trials
- Save European research campaign
- Evaluating the health effects of social interventions
- Antiretroviral therapy in Africa
- Why people smoke
- Treatment of nausea and vomiting during pregnancy: presentation
- How to investigate and manage the child who is slow to speak
- Clinical risk management in obstetrics: eclampsia drills
- Perinatal outcome of singletons and twins after assisted conception: a systematic review of controlled studies
- Comparability of self rated health: cross sectional multi-country survey using anchoring vignettes
- Randomised controlled trial and economic evaluation of a chest pain observation unit compared with routine care
- Indirect comparisons: a novel approach to assessing the effect of anti-HIV drugs
- Clinical efficacy of antiretroviral combination therapy based on protease inhibitors or non-nucleoside analogue reverse transcriptase inhibi
- London doctors' do not put patients among the top five factors for job satisfaction
- UK global antipoverty strategy criticised by Royal Society
- Parents discover their stillborn babies are alive four months after birth
- Report calls for strategies to reduce medication errors
- Hospital's charitable donations diverted to pay running costs
- Controversy surrounds proposed Italian alternative to female genital mutilation
- GPs reluctant to cover out of hours work, survey shows
- Payments announced for patients infected with hepatitis C
- Polypill debate continues
- Colchicine in acute gout
- Colchicine in acute gout
- Colchicine in acute gout
- Special issue on South Asia
- Special issue on South Asia
- WHO's world health report 2003
- WHO's world health report 2003
- Stress and exacerbations in multiple sclerosis
- Kidney trade arrest exposes loopholes in India's transplant laws
- BMJ ethics committee elects new chairperson
- Doctors suspended for removing wrong kidney
- Metapneumovirus is a leading cause of respiratory tract infection in infants
- Changing practice
- More evidence that folic acid reduces risk of ischaemic stroke
- United States wins more time to lobby against WHO diet plan
- Death toll mounts in avian flu outbreak
- Psychological therapies recommended for eating disorders
- Journal rejects article after objections from marketing department
- Shortage of sperm donors predicted when anonymity goes
- In brief
- Judge may report drug company executive to attorney general