《英国医生杂志》.2004年.第26期
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- Computer aided prescribing
- Computer aided prescribing
- Handheld computers in clinical practice
- Handheld computers in clinical practice
- How electronic communication is changing health care
- The standardised admission ratio for measuring widening participation in medical schools: analysis of UK medical school admissions by ethnic
- "Not a university type": focus group study of social class, ethnic, and sex differences in school pupils' perceptions about medical school
- Smokeless tobacco use, birth weight, and gestational age: population based, prospective cohort study of 1217 women in Mumbai, India
- Guillain-Barré syndrome seen in users of isotretinoin
- Delays in publication of cost utility analyses conducted alongside clinical trials: registry analysis
- Impact of the MTHFR C677T polymorphism on risk of neural tube defects: case-control study
- Offending in psychiatric patients after discharge from medium secure units: prospective national cohort study
- Computer aided prescribing
- Girls in southern Sudan are more likely to die in childbirth than complete primary school
- In brief
- Wyeth found guilty of paying to boost use of a specific medicine
- Women aged over 40 who are at increased risk of breast cancer should get annual mammograms
- Oestrogen doesn't protect mental function in older women
- Sexuality of health practitioners is complex
- Public health programmes: you don't know what you've got till it's gone
- Implementing guidance on hip fracture
- Implementing guidance on hip fracture
- Reduce door to needle, not door to balloon, times first
- Amoxicillin for non-severe pneumonia in young children
- Amoxicillin for non-severe pneumonia in young children
- Amoxicillin for non-severe pneumonia in young children
- Computer aided prescribing
- How electronic communication is changing health care
- How electronic communication is changing health care
- How electronic communication is changing health care
- Complex interventions: how "out of control" can a randomised controlled trial be?
- Tobacco and obesity epidemics: not so different after all?
- Initial management of a major burn: I—overview
- Charles Bonnet syndrome—elderly people and visual hallucinations
- Healthcare challenges from the developing world: post-immigration refugee medicine
- What the educators are saying
- scientific articles have hardly changed in 50 years
- Mortality in relation to smoking: 50 years' observations on male British doctors
- Australian Senate committee decides against compensation for victims of infected blood
- Delays in abortion referrals limit women抯 choices, says report
- WHO pulls two generic AIDS drugs from approved list
- Human error and systems failure caused IVF mix up
- Medical schools continue to favour white, middle class candidates
- Health needs of people with learning disabilities neglected
- Obese men can regain sexual function by losing weight and exercising
- Bill clarifies gap in law over living wills
- GlaxoSmithKline to publish clinical trials after US lawsuit
- WHO warns of a polio epidemic in Africa
- "Arrogant doctors" not to blame for variability in drug prescribing
- Dutch government demands reimbursement for charity worker's ransom
- Psychiatrist suspended for undermining patients' trust in treatment
- Hospitals improve on "door to needle" time
- Human Tissue Bill is modified because of research needs
- US doctors debate refusing treatment to malpractice lawyers
- Review finds child experts disagreed in 47 cases out of 5000