《英国医生杂志》.2004年.第19期
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- Recent developments in Bell's palsy
- Recent developments in Bell's palsy
- Recent developments in Bell's palsy
- Recent developments in Bell's palsy
- Recent developments in Bell's palsy
- Medical education should include human rights component
- Palestine: the assault on health and other war crimes
- Palestine: the assault on health and other war crimes
- Palestine: the assault on health and other war crimes
- Palestine: the assault on health and other war crimes
- Palestine: the assault on health and other war crimes
- Palestine: the assault on health and other war crimes
- Palestine: the assault on health and other war crimes
- Monitoring global health: time for new solutions
- Users' guide to detecting misleading claims in clinical research reports
- Should interventions to reduce respirable pollutants be linked to tuberculosis control programmes?
- Care in the early newborn period
- Preventing and treating hepatitis B infection
- UK legislation on analgesic packs: before and after study of long term effect on poisonings
- QT interval increased after single dose of lofexidine
- Impact of congenital colour vision deficiency on education and unintentional injuries: findings from the 1958 British birth cohort
- Paternal age and schizophrenia: a population based cohort study
- The Lambeth Early Onset(LEO) Team: randomised controlled trial of the effectiveness of specialised care for early psychosis
- Doctors who offered "magic potions" found guilty of serious professional misconduct
- Numbers starting treatment for drug misuse increase by 20% over two years
- Independent prescribing advice affects doctors' behaviour
- BMA calls for continuted restrictions on use of IVF
- Manifesto opposes introduction of market forces into Dutch health care
- Bush's plan to screen for mental health meets opposition in Illinois
- Mass dose of antibiotic reduced prevalence of trachoma for two years
- Global spending on health research still skewed towards wealthy nations
- Draft EU legislation threatens patient safety, says BMA
- After the French paradox comes the Italian enigma
- Changes in Canada's medical workforce could affect access to care
- More than a fifth of children in Darfur is malnourished
- FDA approves implantable chip to access medical records
- Teenager held in Guantanamo denied medical evaluation
- 100 000 excess civilian deaths in Iraq since March 2003
- Living on cruise ships is cost effective for elderly people
- Surgeons warn changes will fail without investment in training
- Committee calls for substantial investment in allergy services
- Australian army faces legal action over mefloquine
- US judge halts compulsory anthrax vaccination for soldiers
- England to start national bowel cancer screening programme
- In brief
- UK clinic allowed to screen embryos for rare bowel cancer
- Ergonomics in medicine and surgery
- Management of diastolic heart failure in older adults
- Valuable insights from morbidity coding in primary care
- Influence of socioeconomic deprivation on the primary care burden and treatment of patients with a diagnosis of heart failure in general pra
- What's new this month in BMJ Journals
- Some way to go for consistent implementation of guidance on hip fracture
- Variations in the hospital management of self harm in adults in England: observational study
- Predictors for the development of microalbuminuria and macroalbuminuria in patients with type 1 diabetes: inception cohort study
- Training care givers of stroke patients: economic evaluation
- Training carers of stroke patients: randomised controlled trial
- Patients will be able to report drugs' side effects
- Patients with type 2 diabetes should take statins
- Health agencies end in-fighting on malaria
- New EU trials database is criticised for lack of openness
- Open access could reduce cost of scientific publishing
- UK government endorses national exercise regime
- NHS meets financial targets, but some trusts could do better
- US universities get round regulations on stem cell research
- A lawyer with the Hygeia touch
- Mentally ill offenders are being wrongly held in prisons
- NICE gives guidance on use of new antiepileptic drugs in children
- Newer hypnotics no better for insomnia than short acting benzodiazepines
- Half of Russia's doctors face sack in healthcare reforms
- Doctors charged with planning to kill a patient for his kidneys
- In brief
- Companies offer surgeons incentives to use their prostheses
- College proposes better deal for acute medical patients