《英国医生杂志》.2004年.第1期
......
- Fighting obesity
- Postmarketing surveillance is needed
- Open letter to Annette King, Minister of Health, New Zealand
- Making decisions about benefits and harms of medicines
- Detection, verification, and quantification of adverse drug reactions
- silent prevention
- Balancing benefits and harms in public health prevention programmes mandated by governments
- Patients' view
- Decision aids in clinical practice
- Is evidence based patient choice feasible?
- Royal College expresses concern over transfer of out of hours GP services
- Doctors mistrust systems for reporting medical mistakes
- Fear of stigma deters US soldiers from seeking help for mental health
- Smoking continues to fall among US teens
- NHS takes makers of generic drugs to court for price fixing
- Opinions on public health are split along class lines
- UK parties set out their health stalls in lead-up to next election
- United States brings in new rules to prevent surgical errors
- More patients could be treated in the UK if associate specialists' skills were recognised
- In brief
- Drug for Alzheimer's disease is of little benefit, study shows
- UK universities agree protocol for tobacco company funding
- Childhood obesity and consumption of fizzy drinks
- Childhood obesity and consumption of fizzy drinks
- Childhood obesity and consumption of fizzy drinks
- Fighting obesity
- A 64 year old woman with knee pain: case outcome
- Antidepressants and suicide: what is the balance of benefit and harm
- Balancing benefits and harms: the example of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
- Interaction of St John's wort with conventional drugs: systematic review of clinical trials
- Operative vaginal delivery and neonatal and infant adverse outcomes: population based retrospective analysis
- Systematic review of the incidence and consequences of uterine rupture in women with previous caesarean section
- Adverse drug reactions as cause of admission to hospital: prospective analysis of 18 820 patients
- India has widespread drug problem, report says
- North-south divide in social inequalities in Great Britain
- North-south divide in social inequalities in Great Britain
- North-south divide in social inequalities in Great Britain
- North-south divide in social inequalities in Great Britain
- Electronic incident reporting and professional monitoring transforms culture
- Environmental groups criticise WHO plans to improve health
- Young women in deprived areas in Britain are less likely to have an abortion
- Cancer "tsar" faces parliamentary group on waiting time targets
- Regulatory bodies agree to streamline NHS inspections in England
- US medical students in Cuba may be forced to leave
- NHS needs to produce more doctors, says BMA chairman
- Doctors condemn "patient choice" initiative as no real choice at all
- Young black women have more aggressive breast cancers than white women
- BMA annual representative meeting, Llandudno, 28 June to 1 July
- National Institutes of Health criticised for not preventing conflicts of interest
- Drug marketing practices come under scrutiny
- Saddam Hussein's medical examination should not have been broadcast
- Saddam Hussein's medical examination should not have been broadcast
- Saddam Hussein's medical examination should not have been broadcast
- Review of Hear the Silence
- Long term mortality after severe starvation during the siege of Leningrad: prospective cohort study
- Geneticist抯 sentence reduced in adoption ruling
- Doctors hail new EU directive on tissues and cells
- Poor communication lies at heart of NHS complaints, says ombudsman
- GMC clears head of Alder Hey of professional misconduct
- Judge questions use of colposcopy photos in child abuse cases
- England's health standards lag behind those of other Western countries
- WHO report says AIDS offers healthcare opportunity
- Italy to pass new law on assisted reproduction
- Author's reply to letters on death in heat waves
- United Kingdom research governance strategy
- United Kingdom research governance strategy
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Injury to the eye
- Omega 3 fatty acids and cardiovascular disease—fishing for a natural treatment
- Randomised controlled trial of support from volunteer counsellors for mothers considering breast feeding
- Rash and acute nephritic syndrome due to candesartan
- Bad reporting does not mean bad methods for randomised trials: observational study of randomised controlled trials performed by the Radiatio
- The quality of randomised controlled trials may be better than assumed
- Effect of low doses of ionising radiation in infancy on cognitive function in adulthood: Swedish population based cohort study
- Stable partnership and progression to AIDS or death in HIV infected patients receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy: Swiss HIV cohor
- Meadow faces GMC over evidence given in child death cases
- German patients rush to doctors before new 10 charge starts
- Widespread flu in United States exposes shortage of vaccine
- In brief
- Survey highlights health risks of overseas travel
- Leading scientist threatens to resign over honours debacle
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Self poisoning with pesticides
- Assessing the quality of research
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention
- Academic medicine: time for reinvention