Fentanyl inhalation may cause potentially irreversible brain damage, warn doctors

Toxic leukoencephalopathy seen with heroin inhalation, but this is first reported fentanyl case Inhaling the synthetic opioid fentanyl may cause potentially irreversible brain damage (toxic leukoencephalopathy), warn doctors in the journal BMJ Case Reports, after treating a middle aged man found unresponsive in his hotel room after snorting the drug. Leukoencephalopathy ...

2024-06-04T10:23:48+00:0030 April 2024|BMJ Case Reports, Press release|

Frequent teen vaping might boost risk of toxic lead and uranium exposure

Potentially harmful to brain and organ development, suggest researchers Findings underscore need for implementation of regulations and targeted prevention Frequent teen vaping might boost the risk of exposure to lead and uranium, potentially harming brain and organ development, suggests research published online in the journal Tobacco Control. The findings underscore the ...

2024-06-04T10:25:32+00:0030 April 2024|Press release, Tobacco Control|

Healthy lifestyle may offset effects of life-shortening genes by 60%+

Unhealthy lifestyle linked to 78% heightened risk of death, regardless of ‘good/bad’ genes A healthy lifestyle may offset the effects of life-shortening genes by more than 60%, suggests an analysis of the findings from several large long term studies, published online in the journal BMJ Evidence Based Medicine. While genes and ...

2024-06-04T10:23:48+00:0030 April 2024|BMJ Evidence Based Medicine, Press release|

Medscape removes education courses for doctors funded by tobacco giant

Company acknowledges “misjudgment” following a BMJ investigation, but medics call for a global ban on industry-funded medical education Medical education provider Medscape has bowed to pressure and agreed to permanently remove a series of accredited medical education courses on smoking cessation funded by the tobacco industry giant Philip Morris International ...

2024-06-04T10:24:41+00:0026 April 2024|Press release, The BMJ|

Living at higher altitudes in India linked to increased risk of childhood stunting

Children living at 2000+ m above sea level 40% more at risk than those living 1000m below  Children in rural areas seem to be the most vulnerable Living at higher altitudes in India is linked to an increased risk of stunted growth, with children living in homes 2000 metres or ...

Universities and schools urged to ban alcohol industry-backed health advice

Industry tied programmes provide information to schoolchildren as young as 9 Initiatives normalise drinking and downplay the long term health risks of alcohol, argue experts Public health experts are calling for a ban on alcohol industry funded education programmes in UK universities and schools, which they say normalise drinking and ...

2025-06-26T10:47:49+00:0025 April 2024|Press release, The BMJ|

New agreement between BMJ Impact Analytics and the Office of Health Economics (OHE) announced

BMJ corporate announcement 25 April 2024 The agreement is set to enhance how the real-world impact of OHE’s health economic research is assessed.  April, 2024– Leading global healthcare knowledge provider, BMJ, and the Office of Health Economics (OHE) are delighted to announce that the award-winning* BMJ Impact Analytics, will now ...

2024-06-04T10:25:14+00:0025 April 2024|Corporate announcement, Partnership|

Significant global variation in national covid-19 treatment guidelines

Most countries recommend at least one treatment that definitely doesn’t work Greatest divergence from gold standard recommendations in under-resourced countries National clinical guidelines for the treatment of COVID-19 vary significantly around the world, with under-resourced countries the most likely to diverge from gold standard (World Health Organization; WHO) treatment recommendations, ...

2024-06-04T10:23:16+00:0023 April 2024|BMJ Global Health, Press release|

Active military service may heighten women’s risk of having low birthweight babies

Findings highlight need for more female-specific research in armed forces, say study authors Active military service may heighten a woman’s risk of having a low birthweight baby, suggests a review of the available scientific evidence published online in the journal BMJ Military Health. The findings highlight the need for more research ...

2024-06-04T10:23:00+00:0023 April 2024|BMJ Military Health, Press release|

Cost increasingly important motive for quitting smoking for 1 in 4 adults in England

Making much more of potential savings might encourage more people to stub out for good  Health concerns are still the primary motive for more than half of those who say they want to stop smoking in England, but cost is now a key factor for more than 1 in 4, ...

2024-06-04T10:23:17+00:0023 April 2024|BMJ Public Health, Press release|
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