《英国医生杂志》.2005年.第7期
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- London think tank warns of backlash over deadlines
- English emergency care varies widely, commission finds
- Why the next census needs to ask about language
- European water treaty hailed as a milestone for public health
- Effect of media portrayals of removal of children's tissue on UK tumou
- Weapons of mass destruction—threats and responses
- Young people's access to tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs
- Simple measures can predict death in malnourished children
- Korea pushes forward on cloning front
- Combing and combating head lice
- The failure of antibiotics to prevent heart attacks
- Alternative breast cancer drug shows promise
- NHS research programme to be transformed
- Avian flu pandemic could be brought under control in three weeks
- Drug only helps slightly to keep shift workers awake at night
- Temporal trends in multiple births after in vitro fertilisation in Swe
- Variability in interpretation of chest radiographs among Russian clini
- Acupuncture in patients with tension-type headache: randomised control
- Randomised controlled trial of home based motivational interviewing by
- Increases in testicular cancer may be linked to the rise in maternal b
- Computerised database monitors vaccine safety in Vietnam
- What the educators are saying
- The challenges of systematic reviews of educational research
- Early practical experience and the social responsiveness of clinical e
- Single blind, randomised, comparative study of the Bug Buster kit and
- What's new this month in BMJ Journals
- Length of hospital stay and subsequent emergency readmission
- What's new in the other general journals
- Appeal court says US cannot seek payout from tobacco firms
- Mumps cases on the rise in England and Wales
- In brief
- BMJ appoints its first woman editor
- Concerted effort needed to stop polio transmission in Asia by 2006
- Smoke-free workplaces would hit tobacco profits
- Tobacco lobby threatens to derail global antismoking treaty
- Cardiac mortality in children in Oxford hospital is not excessive
- Dutch GPs in protest at modernisation plans
- Rip up draft mental health bill and start again, says BMA
- Opening the door on vested interests
- Canadian life expectancy varies greatly depending on ethnic origin
- Patients with cancer are at high risk of venous thrombosis
- Abstinence only programmes do not change sexual behaviour, Texas study
- Austrian medical schools fear influx of German students
- Asbestos related cancer deaths set to rise
- Newcastle centre gains licence for therapeutic cloning
- Rectal artemether versus intravenous quinine for the treatment of cere
- Zinc deficiency: what are the most appropriate interventions?
- Headache
- Time to review all the evidence for hormone replacement therapy
- Testing patients to allow tailored drug treatment
- Azathioprine-induced pancytopenia in a patient with pompholyx and defi
- Academic medicine: who is it for?
- Healthcare lessons from Australia: what can Michael Howard learn from
- Consent, competence, and confidentiality
- Academic medicine: who is it for?
- Academic medicine: who is it for?
- Academic medicine: who is it for?
- Academic medicine: who is it for?
- Academic medicine: who is it for?
- Academic medicine: who is it for?
- BMJ should notify doctors whose practice is criticised in interactive
- Academic medicine: who is it for?
- Academic medicine: who is it for?
- Academic medicine: who is it for?
- Dealing with editorial misconduct
- Dealing with editorial misconduct
- Effectiveness of speed cameras in preventing road traffic collisions a
- US institute announces initiative to put all its research on the web
- Monitoring changes in hospital standardised mortality ratios
- A support group's perspective
- Long term psychological outcome for women with congenital adrenal hype
- Randomised controlled trial of conservative management of postnatal ur
- Association between hormone replacement therapy and subsequent stroke:
- What's new this month in BMJ Journals
- Academic medicine: who is it for?
- Academic medicine: who is it for?
- Academic medicine: who is it for?