BMJ Group pandemic flu podcasts show

BMJ Group pandemic flu podcasts

Summary: BMJ Group brings doctors and healthcare professionals the latest updates on swine flu, including information on prevention, symptoms, testing, and treatment. We’ve published articles, podcasts, learning modules, and other resources, including information for patients, on a range of pandemic flu issues.

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Podcasts:

 NHS reforms round table | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

This week the British government has tabled an amendment to remove maximum pricing from the Health and Social Care Bill. We convened a round table discussion to find out what other elements of the bill need re-examining. Joining us in the studio at BMA h

 From Fukushima | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

As the world’s attention turns to Fukushima, we hear from Ryuki Kassai, Director of Community and Family Medicine at Fukushima Medical University, about the situation on the ground there. He tells us about the difficulties they currently face, and the unc

 Trade in generics | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Jamie Love, Knowledge Ecology International, and Hans Hogerzeil, director of essential medicines and pharmaceutical policies at the World Health Organization (WHO), discuss the ongoing EU trade negotiations with India. They set out their concerns that it

 10 Lords revolting | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Seth Berkley, CEO of GAVI (formerly the “Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation”), talks to Rebecca Coombes about the future of vaccination funding. Also this week, the Health and Social Care bill, set to change the English NHS, is about to enter

 Regulating education, and respiratory infections | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

The Health and Social Care Bill for England has now reached the House of Lords. With the proposed demise of deaneries, questions still remain about how medical training will be carried out in the future. Niall Dickson, chief executive of the General Medic

 Climate, health, and security | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Hugh Montgomery, director of the University College London Institute for Human Health & Performance, talks about the space where climate, health, and international security meet. Christabel Owens, head of mental health research at the Devon Partnership N

 Decriminalisation of drugs in Portugal | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

In 2001 Portugal abolished all criminal penalties for personal possession of drugs – effectively decriminalising their use. Health journalist Nigel Hawkes talks to João Goulão, Portugal’s drug tsar, to find out how effective this policy change has been.

 Watching receptionists, watching weight | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

One way of tackling obesity is by attending a weight loss club, such as WeightWatchers . There are many such schemes available on the NHS, but which one is the most effective? We find out the results of an RCT that aims to find out. Also this week, ethno

 Undernutrition in India | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Tessa Richards (BMJ’s analysis editor) and Duncan Jarvies (BMJ’s multimedia producer) talk to Veena Rao (adviser at Karnataka Nutrition Mission, India) about the issue of undernutrion in the country. And David Payne (BMJ’s web editor) gives us a run-down

 Sudden death in epilepsy; NAFLD mortality | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Mariana Lazo, from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, tells us how non-alcoholic fatty liver disease has affected all cause mortality in the US. Also, Ley Sander, from University College London, discusses the problem of sudden death in epile

 Evolved to run | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

This week’s podcast is from UKSEM, the big sports and exercise medicine conference in London. Daniel Lieberman, an evolutionary biologist from Harvard, explains how we have evolved to run. Steven Blair, University of South Carolina, explains how physical

 AIDS at 30 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

To mark World AIDS Day, the WHO has issued a report outlining policy successes and failures in the diagnosis and treatment of HIV/AIDS. Yves Souteyrand, the co-ordinator of the report, joins us to discuss its findings and how to combat the disease in the

 Brain drain | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

How much does it cost sub-Saharan countries to train all the doctors who end up working in the UK, US, Canada, and Australia? Edward Mills from the University of Ottawa explains his economic analysis of healthcare migration. Also Hungarian health minister

 Death in Borsetshire | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Vanessa Whitburn, editor of BBC Radio 4’s The Archers, talks morbidity and mortality in Ambridge. James Raftery, University of Southampton, updates the Forrest Report – whose evidence prompted the breast cancer screening programme in the UK.

 2011 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Somehow we've come to the end of another year. The Independent's health editor Jeremy Laurance talks us through the big health stories from 2011. And Greg Scott discusses his Christmas paper on the phrase "obs stable", and what it's revealed these two wo

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