Medicine and Science from The BMJ - podcast cover

Medicine and Science from The BMJ

The BMJ brings you interviews with the people who are shaping medicine and science around the world.
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Episodes

Anticipatory care

“How long have I got, doc” is a TV medical drama cliche - but like all cliches has it’s feet in real life - and it’s medicine’s attempt to answer these questions that the authors of an analysis article on TheBMJ.com are questioning. Kirsty Boyd is a consultant in palliative care in NHS lothian, a trainer and a researcher with the University of Edinburgh. Scott Murray is a GP, and St Columba's Hospice Chair of Primary Palliative Care, also at the University of edinburgh. They argue that it’s time...

Aug 05, 201617 min

Ivan Oransky watching retractions

Ivan Oransky, co-founder of Retraction Watch and global editorial director at MedPage Today, discusses which areas of science are most affected by research fraud, and what motivates individuals to risk their careers by fabricating data.

Jul 29, 201633 min

How does maximizing shareholder value distort drug development?

With the emergence of sofobuvir, a new direct acting antiviral, treatment for Hepatitis C infection is currently undergoing it's greatest change since the discovery of the virus 25 years ago. However Gilead, who manufacture the treatment, are under fire for the cost of the druge - around $90 000 for a course of treatment. Victor Roy, doctoral researcher at the University of Cambridge, discusses how the new drug was discovered and came to market, and what happened to the profits from sale. Read t...

Jul 28, 201618 min

What went wrong with care.data?

Failures in implementation of data sharing projects have eroded public trust. In the wake of NHS England’s decision to close down its care.data programme, Tjeerd-Pieter van Staa professor of health e-research at the University of Manchester, examines what lessons must be learnt, and what we can do better next time. Read the full analysis: http://www.bmj.com/content/354/bmj.i3636

Jul 22, 201613 min

You’ve been ICE’d

We’re taught that patients' ideas, concerns, and expectations are central to a successful consultation, but has ICEing gone too far? A “What your patient is thinking” article published this week talks about the pressure that asking questions in the wrong way can put on a patient. Sophie Cook, education editor for The BMJ, is joined by the author of that article - The BMJ’s patient editor, Rosamund Snow, and by Roger Neighbour, former president of the royal college of general practice, and author...

Jul 22, 201622 min

Should we scrap the internal market in England’s NHS

The "internal market" was created after the 1987 UK general election focused attention on inadequate funding in the NHS, long waiting lists for elective surgery, and large unwarranted variations in clinical care. Economists attributed these problems to a lack of incentives for efficiency, and the remedies offered included increasing competition in the NHS. Twenty nine years later, this interesting experiment is not likely to have been worth it, says Alan Maynard, professor emeritus of health eco...

Jul 15, 201619 min

Treating hip osteoarthritis

2.46 million people in England have osteoarthritis of the hip, and many of those go on to eventually have a hip replacement - which is now widely considered one of the most commonly performed and successful operations in the world. Jessamy Bagenal, clinical fellow with The BMJ, talks to Nick Aresti, a specialist registrar in trauma and orthopaedic surgery and one of the authors of a clinical update on hip osteoarthritis, recently published on thebmj.com In a linked podcast, Nick Nicholas, a pati...

Jul 08, 201624 min

Having hip osteoarthritis

2.46 million people in England have osteoarthritis of the hip, and many of those go on to eventually have a hip replacement - which is now widely considered one of the most commonly performed and successful operations in the world. Jessamy Bagenal, clinical fellow with The BMJ, talks to Nick Nicholas, an obstetrician who has had OA and one of the authors of a clinical update on hip osteoarthritis, recently published on thebmj.com In a linked podcast, Nick Aresti, a specialist registrar in trauma...

Jul 08, 201613 min

PreP And public health

The drug Truvada, licenced for HIV PrEP, costs £350 a month but is shown to be cost effective in preventing infection. However, in the English NHS, a row has broken out about which body should fund the treatment - NHS England claims local authorities have responsibility, local authorities believe NHS England does. In this podcast Jim McManus, director of public health at Hertfordshire County Council, explains why he believes local authorities cannot afford the treatment, and describes the pressu...

Jul 08, 201617 min

Can guidelines be reformulated to account for how doctors actually use information?

Guidelines usually assume a rational comprehensive decision model in which all values, means, and ends are known and considered. In clinical encounters, however, patients and doctors most often follow “the science of muddling through. Given that clinical knowledge does not follow the narrow rationality of “if-then” algorithms contained in guidelines, alternatives are desperately needed. Glyn Elwyn, professor at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, joins us to discuss ...

Jul 01, 201620 min

Evidence live - Emily Sena on closing the gap between clinical and basic science

When we think about medical evidence, we think of RCTs, registries and meta-analysis. But these EBM tools have yet to filter into the basic science that underpins clinical science. One person changing that is Emily Sena, research fellow in clinical brain sciences at the University of Edinburgh - and one of the few people who’s trying to meta-analyse animal studies.

Jun 24, 201617 min

Epilepsy in pregnancy

In every 1000 pregnancies, between two and five infants are born to women with epilepsy. For such women, pregnancy can be a time of anxiety over maternal and fetal wellbeing. In 96% of pregnancies they will deliver a healthy child. However, some women will experience an increase in seizure frequency, which can be harmful for the mother or fetus, and evidence comes from observational study and registry data suggests some antiepileptic drugs are associated with an increased risk of congenital and ...

Jun 21, 201618 min

Caring for patients with delirium at the end of their life

Delirium is common in the last weeks or days of life. It can be distressing for patients and those around them. A clinical update explains why successful management involves excluding reversible causes of delirium and balancing drugs that may provoke or maintain delirium while appreciating that most patients want to retain clear cognition at the end of life. Kate Adlington, clinical editor at The BMJ, is joined by the authors of the paper - Christian Hosker, consultant liaison psychiatrist at Le...

Jun 14, 201618 min

”What has convinced me is the evidence” - why mandatory treatment for drug use is a bad idea

Global evidence indicates that mandated treatment of drug dependence conflicts with drug users’ human rights and is not effective in treating addiction. Karsten Lunze, associate professor at the Boston University School of Medicine, joins us to describe the evidence, and why he is convinced seemingly counter intuitive hard reduction works. http://www.bmj.com/content/353/bmj.i2943

Jun 10, 201612 min

Tell me a story

How can asking patient to tell us their story improve healthcare? Helen Morant, content lead at BMJ, talks us through her project getting healthcare professionals to sit down with patients and record their conversations, and what on earth this has to do with quality improvement. We also hear some of the recordings she has gathered through the project. Here are links to the other podcasts and projects Helen mentions: Story Corps - https://storycorps.org/ The Listening Project - http://goo.gl/3auS...

Jun 03, 201626 min

Guidelines Not Tramlines

Julian Treadwell, Neal Maskrey and Richard Lehman join us in the studio to argue that new models of evidence synthesis and shared decision making are needed to accelerate a move from guideline driven care to individualised care. Read the full analysis: www.bmj.com/content/353/bmj.i2452

May 27, 201622 min

Uncovering the uncertainty on wound dressing

There is insufficient evidence to know whether dressings reduce the risk of surgical site infection in closed primary surgical wounds. Jane Blazeby, professor of surgery at the University of Bristol, and Thomas Pinkney, consultant colorectal surgeon at the University of Birmingham, join us to discusses why there is a lack of evidence, and the implications for patient care. read the full article: http://www.bmj.com/content/353/bmj.i2270

May 26, 201612 min

Women and the Zika Virus

Interviews from the Women deliver conference in Copenhagen. Donna McCarraher, director of reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health at FHI 360, explains why women should be at the centre of efforts to mitigate the effect of Zika Virus in Brazil.

May 25, 20168 min

Abortion as a development issue

Interviews from the Women deliver conference in Copenhagen. Catrin Schulte-Hillen, co-ordinator of reproductive health and sexual violence care at Medecins Sans Frontieres, explains why the development community shouldn't conflate sexual violence and access to abortion.

May 25, 201611 min

What are they on?

This week, we look at medication reconciliation. Joshua Pevnick, health services researcher and hospital physician at Cedars-Sinai Hospital, LA, US, talks us through what it is and why it can be so hard to get right. And Emma Iddles, a junior doctor in general surgery at Hairmyres Hospital, Lanarkshire, UK, explains how her project improved medicines reconciliation in the surgical admissions unit of the hospital. For more, read Joshua's full paper, http://goo.gl/O59BWo, and Emma's project write ...

May 20, 201614 min

The Weekend Effect - what’s (un)knowable, and what next?

We do we know about the weekend effect? As Martin McKee puts it in an editorial on thebmj.com, "almost nothing is clear in this tangled tale" In this roundtable, Navjoyt Ladher, Analysis editor for The BMJ is joined by some of the key academics who have published research and commented on the weekend effect to make sense of what we know and don’t know about weekend care in hospitals. http://www.bmj.com/weekend Taking part in the discussion are: Cassie Aldridge, HiSLAC study project manager at th...

May 20, 201654 min

”Women deliver, and not only babies”

Katja Iversen, CEO of Women Deliver, joins Rebecca Coombes to explain why the UN sustainable development goals are unachievable if we don't empower women and girls to take control of their health, wellbeing, and reproductive rights. http://womendeliver.org/

May 16, 201624 min

Travellers’ diarrhoea

Travellers’ diarrhoea is one of the most common illnesses in people who travel internationally, and depending on destination affects 20-60% of the more than 800 million travellers each year. In most cases the diarrhoea occurs in people who travel to areas with poor food and water hygiene. Mike Brown, consultant in infectious diseases and tropical medicine at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, explains the approach to the prevention and treatment of diarrhoea in travellers. Read ...

May 13, 201618 min

”The information we get can be harmfull”; Informed consent is not a panacea

Providing information to enable informed choices about healthcare sounds immediately appealing to most of us. But Minna Johansson, GP trainee and PhD student at the University of Gothenburg, argues that preventive medicine and expanding disease definitions have changed the ethical premises of informed choice and our good intentions may inadvertently advance overmedicalisation. Read the full analysis: http://www.bmj.com/content/353/bmj.i2230

May 09, 20169 min

The science of improvement

Or, the one where Fiona Moss and Don Berwick tells us what they think quality improvement is. Fiona Moss is dean, Royal Society of Medicine, and Don Berwick is president emeritus and senior fellow, Institute for Healthcare Improvement. Don's talk and the interview with Fiona were both recorded at the International Forum on Quality and Safety in Healthcare, Gothenburg, April 2016. Watch out for the extended versions of these recordings, up next Friday.

May 06, 201614 min

Medical error—the third leading cause of death in the US

Medical error is not included on death certificates or in rankings of cause of death. Martin Makary, professor of surgery at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, joins us to explain why we don't measure medical error, and why it is so important that we start. Read the full analysis: http://www.bmj.com/content/353/bmj.i2139

May 04, 201612 min

Ecigarettes; ”...the risk is 5% of that caused by smoking”

Nicholas Hopkinson, reader in respiratory medicine at Imperial College London, joins us to explain why a new report from the Royal College of Physicians supports the role of electronic cigarettes as part of a comprehensive tobacco control strategy. Read the full analysis: http://www.bmj.com/content/353/bmj.i1745

Apr 29, 201615 min

BMJ roundtable: How to fix out of hours care

The BMJ recently held a discussion between experts in the fields of general practice, emergency medicine, and paediatrics about the state of out of hours care in the UK, and crucially offered their vision for a better service. Are children a special case, can urgent care ‘hubs’ be a silver bullet, is NHS 111 up to the job of triaging patients, do there enough clinicians involved in out of hours care, and are other countries doing a better job? The state of out of hours care can best be described...

Apr 27, 201623 min

Bad with names

It's bad practice to prescribe a brand name drug when a cheaper, viable and approved generic is available. But, particularly in the US, this happens too much, at major cost to the health system. The team behind Michigan State University's paediatric clinics set out to increase their prescribing of generics, and found that much of the problem was that whilst brand names lodged in staff and patient's minds, generic names were easily forgotten. Sath Sudhanthar, paediatrician and assistant professor...

Apr 22, 201611 min
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