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The BMJ Today: Fat—the word that dare not speak its name in The BMJ?

November 12, 2014

One of The BMJ articles trending today is our outspoken weekly columnist Margaret McCartney’s latest piece, which takes to task recent critics of overweight NHS staff. Sally Davies and Simon […]

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The BMJ Today: Talking about the harms of IV fluids

November 11, 2014

I recall grillings about intravenous (IV) fluids and the compartments of the body as a very junior doctor. Confidence in prescribing the right fluid, at the right rate at the […]

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The BMJ Today: A US unprepared for Ebola, fat doctors, and stiff upper lips

November 10, 2014

“Misinformation and conflicting messages have led to panic about contagion among the public,” writes The BMJ’s US clinical research editor, José G Merino, in our latest editorial on Ebola, which […]

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The BMJ Today: More GPs needed

November 7, 2014

“Why are medical schools attracting so few would-be GPs?” asks Richard Wakeford in a personal view, concluding that the Medical Schools Council is at least partly responsible: “Of 33 members […]

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The BMJ Today: Have we forgotten our stiff upper lip?

November 6, 2014

The “Keep Calm and Carry On” slogan is a familiar sight on everything from posters to mugs, but has this sentiment, the embodiment of the famed Dunkirk spirit, been forgotten […]

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The BMJ Today: Trade wars and naloxone

November 5, 2014

A free trade agreement between the European Union and the United States is designed to meet the interests of corporations rather than patients and must be stopped in its tracks, […]

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The BMJ Today: What’s in a name?

November 4, 2014

Next time you sneak a peek at an author’s affiliations, ask yourself if they mattered to you. Do you pay more attention to a study from Harvard University in the […]

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The BMJ Today: Managers need to get ‘aht the flippin’ way

November 3, 2014

Many thanks to consultant psychiatrist Geoff Searle for providing the headline for today’s BMJ Today, shamelessly stolen from his weekend rapid response to the essay about “flipping healthcare,” published last […]

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The BMJ Today: Clinical challenges

October 31, 2014

When my patients with acute stroke develop a urinary tract infection, I often prescribe a course of co-trimoxazole (trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole).  Many of these patients have hypertension and are also taking an […]

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The BMJ Today: Leapfrogging—the new buzzword in healthcare

October 30, 2014

It is easy to take universal health coverage for granted if you were born and raised in a European country, for example. But in low and middle income countries, people […]

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