BMJ Group expands open access offering across Europe

BMJ expands open access offering across Europe with three Read and Publish agreements in France Leading healthcare knowledge provider BMJ partners with Hospices Civils de Lyon, Université Côte d'Azur, and Université de Bordeaux to support open access publishing and advance healthcare research June 2023—leading global healthcare knowledge provider,  BMJ, is expanding ...

2024-06-04T10:25:19+00:0027 June 2023|Corporate announcement, Partnership|

Mediation’s role in disputes about child’s medical treatment questioned

Might have avoided only just under half of these court cases since 1990 in England and Wales The role of mediation in preventing disputes between parents and doctors about a seriously ill child’s medical treatment from escalating to litigation may be more limited than hoped for, suggests an analysis of ...

Age of those with gender dysphoria is falling

And it’s lower for those assigned female sex at birth than those assigned male The age of those who are distressed because of a mismatch between their biological sex and their gender identity—known as gender dysphoria—has been steadily falling, reveals research published in the open access journal General Psychiatry. And it’s ...

2024-06-04T10:25:45+00:0027 June 2023|General Psychiatry, Press release|

New ruling on care of dying will force “machine-related suffering” on some

Progressive step, but ruling still has important shortcomings + missed opportunities, say specialists The newly revised ruling on advance medical directives and withholding/withdrawing medical support for the dying in India will inevitably force some terminally ill patients to “live a life of machine-related suffering” and deprive them of their autonomy ...

Leading institutions urged to review support for disgraced surgeon

It’s time for some of the world’s best hospitals and research institutes to examine their role in the deadly legacy of a stem cell charlatan, say researchers It’s time for some of the world’s best hospitals and research institutes to launch full and independent investigations into their support for disgraced ...

2024-06-04T10:25:08+00:0022 June 2023|Press release, The BMJ|

Patients do better when surgeon averages 10 + annual shoulder ops

Patients of higher volume surgeons experienced lower risks Patients treated by surgeons who average over 10 shoulder replacements a year have a lower risk of reoperation and serious complications, and a shorter hospital stay than those treated by surgeons who do fewer operations, finds a study published by The BMJ today. These ...

2025-06-26T10:00:23+00:0022 June 2023|Press release, The BMJ|

International expert panel revises management of concussion in sport

Latest Consensus Statement on Concussion in Sport includes: -New and updated age appropriate tools to aid identification and management of condition -New versions of return to active sport and education strategies -Stronger evidence for benefits of light intensity exercise within first 48 hours to aid recovery -New targeted approach to ...

Bhopal may have raised intergenerational disability, cancer risks

And it may have curbed educational attainment and prompted fall in proportion of male births  Disaster likely affected people across a substantially more extensive area than previously thought   The Bhopal gas explosion in 1984—one of India’s worst industrial disasters—may have heightened the risk of disability and cancer in later life among ...

2024-06-04T10:23:36+00:0014 June 2023|BMJ Open, Press release|

NHS “flying blind” in attempt to tackle ethnic inequalities in care, warns expert

Higher quality data needed to understand and address “stark and persistent” inequalities across the life course The NHS will be “flying blind” in its attempts to meet its legal, and moral, obligation to eliminate ethnic inequalities in health and care until longstanding problems with the quality of ethnicity data are resolved, warns ...

2024-06-04T10:25:09+00:0014 June 2023|Press release, The BMJ|

Most women diagnosed with early breast cancer can expect to become long term cancer survivors

Findings show substantial fall in risk of death from breast cancer since the 1990s and provide reassurance for patients and doctors Most women diagnosed with early stage breast cancer today can expect to become long term cancer survivors, finds a study published by The BMJ today. The findings show that the average ...

2024-06-04T10:23:13+00:0014 June 2023|Press release, The BMJ|
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