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.
Last refreshed:
Follow this podcast in the Metacast mobile app to refresh it and see new episodes.
Download Metacast podcast app
Podcasts are better in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episodes

Variolae Vaccina

If you visited Trafalgar Square in central London today you’d see Admiral Nelson gazing down from his column. What you won’t see is a statue to celebrate the work of Edward Jenner – although once there was one. Gareth Williams, a professor of medicine at the University of Bristol, is backing a campaign to have Jenner’s statue reinstated. Mabel Chew talks to him about the life and times of the father of vaccination.

Aug 29, 201325 min

Sunbeds and spotlights

This week the BMJ published research into the use of sunbeds. Cancer Research UK surveyed teenagers across the country to find out how often they top up their tan. Duncan Jarvies talks to Catherine Thomson, from Cancer Research UK, and Madeleine Brindley, a journalist who’s often campaigned on the dangers of solariums, about the results. Also this week, recent revelations from a group of stem cell scientists shone a light on some of the problems with peer review. Modern science often holds it sa...

Aug 29, 201320 min

Cannabis conversations

This week Duncan Jarvies discusses with London GP Chris Ford how to talk to patients about their cannabis use. Rebecca Coombes talks to Jim Swire, a retired GP whose daughter Flora died in the Lockerbie bombing. Dr Swire has written an article for the BMJ about the role of Abdelbaset Al-Megrahi’s doctors in his early release.

Aug 29, 201321 min

Regulating herbal medicines

This week Ike Iheanacho investigates the role of herbal remedies in modern medicine. He speaks to Dr Linda Anderson, Principal Pharmaceutical Assessor at the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), and Michael Mcintyre, chair of the European Herbal Practitioners Association. Sabreena Malik and David Payne take us through the week’s news.

Aug 29, 201317 min

Sudden death

This week’s podcast is based on the BMJ series Competent Novice.Junior doctors play an important part in verifying sudden deaths in hospital and communicating with the family of the deceased. Unexpected, and often premature, deaths can be challenging to manage. In this podcast Mabel Chew talks to Paul Frost, a consultant in intensive care medicine at the University of Wales. Paul gives practical step by step advice on dealing with sudden death, illustraded by a case study of a 19 year old stab v...

Aug 29, 201322 min

Seeing the body

A traumatic death can be very difficult for friends and family to deal with. A clinician’s instinct may be to protect them from seeing the extent of the damage to the body. However this may not be best in the long run. Duncan Jarvies talks to Alison Chapple about her research into people’s experiences of viewing a body after a traumatic death. Also this week, the National Patient Safety Agency regularly issue alerts about clinical problems that can be averted. Mabel Chew talks to the NPSA about ...

Aug 29, 201323 min

Cambodia

This week David Payne talks to Emily Friedman, a health policy and ethics analyst, about Cambodia – a country with a difficult past that is now rebuilding its healthcare system to try to meet some of the particular needs of its population.

Aug 29, 201318 min

Screening and serodiscordance

In this week’s podcast Duncan Jarvies talks to Theresa Marteau about screening for diabetes; can patients be given too much information? Also Anne Buvé discusses the likelihood of HIV transmission in serodiscordant couples when the infected partner is receiving antiretroviral treatment. Annabel Ferriman takes us through the news.

Aug 29, 201323 min

Legacy of the games

This week we’ re looking at the legacy of large sports events - with the 2012 Olympic games costing £9bn, and that cost being justified by saying how great an impact the games will have on the health of the nation. We talk to Gerry McCartney about his systematic review of the evidence for those claims. Antibiotic resistance is a major problem, and we increasingly have to turn to second line drugs as bacteria become immune. We have just published a systematic review on bmj.com that looks at the l...

Aug 29, 201323 min

Healthy heart, happy smile

In this week’s podcast we examine the link between toothbrushing and cardiovascular disease – Richard Watts talks about his research in Scotland. Also this week the Department of Health issued a statement that has made some people wonder about the future of NICE. Fiona Godlee discusses the statement with health economist James Raftery. Finally this week, Evan Harris may have recently lost his seat in parliament, but one thing that’ll keep him busy is his new job as a columnist for the BMJ. Trevo...

Aug 29, 201324 min

Suicide, sport, and CME

What is the association between IQ and attempted suicide? David Batty talks to us about his research in Sweden. Also this week, Steven Kawczak, associate director of the Cleveland Clinic’s Center for Continuing Education, outlines the clinic’s new CME partnership with the BMJ and BMJ Learning. And finally, Richard Budgett, chief medical officer of the London 2012 Olympics, speaks about how scientists are hoping to beat the cheats. He also discusses a recent BMJ research paper about the limited h...

Aug 29, 201325 min

I ♥ the smoking ban

This week research published on bmj.com looks at the association between the smoking ban and a drop in acute myocardial infarctions. Anna Gilmore, director of the Tobacco Control Centre at the University of Bath, talks to us about her findings. We also hear from the London Health Observatory about how much money the drop has saved the NHS.

Aug 29, 201313 min

Radios and retinas

Since mobile phones have been around there has been public concern about their safety - fears over radiation exposure causing cancer have been particularly trenchant. This week Paul Elliott and his colleagues published research looking for an increase in the incidence of childhood cancers around mobile phone base stations. Paul joins us in the studio. NCEPOD (the National Confidential Enquiry into Patient Outcome and Death) have published a report on parenteral nutrition. Kayte McCann talks to g...

Aug 29, 201325 min

BMA-on-Sea

This week saw the British Medial Association’s Annual Representatives Meeting. Deborah Cohen and Helen Morant tell us what was going on in Brighton. Also this week we have the second part of Sophie Arie’s special report on Haiti.

Aug 29, 201317 min

Methado, methadon’t, methadone

Later this month sees the 17th International AIDS Conference in Vienna. One of the topics that will be discussed there is harm reduction, and the political will to embrace it.In this podcast, we look at the effects of long term opiate substitution programmes in Muirhouse, Edinburgh. Local GP Roy Robertson discusses the research he conducted there. We also travel to Kiev in Ukraine, where Richard Hurley talks to NGOs and injecting drug users about local harm reduction programmes.

Aug 29, 201321 min

The white paper

The new coalition government’s white paper on health – encompassing the future of the NHS - was published this week. Chris Ham, chief executive of the health policy think-tank the King’s Fund and professor of health policy and management at the University of Birmingham, and Edward Davies, editor of BMJ Careers, discuss their immediate impressions with Ashley McKimm. Also this week a paper on www.bmj.com looks at suicide, and how the method of an attempted suicide relates to a later successful at...

Aug 29, 201324 min

The bridge

This week the print BMJ has a cluster of articles on suicide – one of which talks about the efficacy of physical barriers to prevent suicide from bridges. In the podcast, we’ll hear from Kevin Hines the survivor of such an attempt, and Alys Cole-King, a psychiatrist who wants to break down the stigma of suicide. We’ll also hear from Gordon Smith, one of the authors of a study looking at a link between the time when a mother gives birth – whether it’s in the normal working week, or out of hours -...

Aug 29, 201325 min

The NHS market place

The new coalition government’s plans for the NHS in England put GPs firmly in the driving seat - how do their secondary care colleagues feel about that? Jacky Davis, co-chair of the NHS Consultants’ Association and a founder member of the “Keep our NHS Public” campaign, shares her views with Duncan Jarvies. Duncan also talks to Professor Julian Le Grand from the London School of Economics about how market pressures can help make health care more efficient and what GP fundholding taught us. To se...

Aug 29, 201321 min

Musical lithotomy

In June 2010 the drug company Novo Nordisk announced that its only conventional human biphasic insulin, human Mixtard 30, would no longer be available in the UK from January 2011, a decision that affects an estimated 90,000 patients Drug and Theraputics Bulletin (DTB), one of the BMJ’s sister journals, is campaigning against that decision. DTB editor Ike Ihenacho talks about the campaign. Mabel Chew talks to the authors of a rational testing article on what to do about mildly abnormal serum amin...

Aug 29, 201325 min

Heavy weather

In this week’s podcast we discover the link between the weather and the risk of heart attacks - Krishnan Bhaskaran tells us about his research. Also, criticism and response are crucial parts of the scientific process, but how well do authors of research papers respond to critics of their work? Peter Gøtzsche and Tony Delamothe discuss their work looking at that in the BMJ.

Aug 29, 201321 min

The hidden eunuch

Jill Morrison talks about how people on long term incapacity benefit because of mental health problems could be identified by their GPs three years before they stop working. BMJ Deputy editor Trish Groves explains more about the journal’s new policy of asking authors of eligible research articles to pay a publication fee. And, finally, why does the modern eunuch remain invisible?

Aug 29, 201322 min

Shit happens

This week, to steal a line from the latest BMJ editor’s choice, we’ll be talking shit. The millennium development goal on sanitation is way off track; Lyla Mehta, a sociologist from the Institute of Development Studies, tells us why, and Kamal Kar, a development consultant from India, explains how his grass roots initiative changes the way people view sanitation. Also, National confidential enquiry into patient outcome and death reported on cosmetic surgery this week. Dr Alex Goodwin, anaestheti...

Aug 28, 201317 min

NICE in America

In this week’s podcast we find out from Sean Tunis about the future of comparative effectiveness research in the USA, and how the new institute created to champion it will differ from the UK’s National Institute of Clinical Excellence. Also, Claudia Cooper talks about her research that could support carers in the decisions they have to make for dementia sufferers.

Aug 28, 201317 min

Rational suicide

A person’s right to refuse treatment is based on their capacity to make a rational decision – but what is the situation when someone is admitted after a suicide attempt? Can you be simultaneously rational and suicidal? Anthony David from the Institute of Psychiatry gives us his views. A second interview deals with Barrett’s oesophagus, which is on the increase. The same is true for adenocarcinoma of the oesophagus, which can arise from the condition. We talked to Rebecca Fitzgerald from the Hutc...

Aug 28, 201321 min

Spotlight on palliative care beyond cancer

In a series of articles, this spotlight focuses on recognising and managing the end of life, having the difficult conversations with patients about their death, and the importance of taking into account the spiritual aspects of death. In this podcast Duncan Jarvies talks to the authors of 2 of those articles. Professor Jane Maher, oncologist and CMO of Macmillan Cancer Support, talks about the importance of end of life care. Dr Mike Knapton, GP and CMO of the British Heart Foundation, talks abou...

Aug 28, 201316 min

Radical reforms

This week we’re joined by Martin McKee, professor of European public health at the Loncon School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. He’s also research director of the European observatory on health systems and policies, a group that promotes evidence based healthcare policies in Europe. We’ll be discussing the effect the squeeze in funding is having on health care in Europe, and the various strategies different countries are using to save money.

Aug 28, 201318 min

Safety comes second

Last week saw Safety 2010, the international conference on preventable accidents. We hear from some of the speakers there why safety comes second when it comes to global health. Also this week, female sexual dysfunction - fact or fiction. In advance of a BMJ debate on the topic, we get to the heart of the issue.

Aug 28, 201317 min

The new lost tribe

Last week BMJ Careers published “The new lost tribe,” describing the cohort of surgical trainees moving from ST2 to ST3. In this podcast Edward Davies, BMJ Careers editor, and Tom Dolphin, a member of the BMA junior doctors’ committee, describe how competition for training places is affecting career progression.

Aug 28, 201313 min

Reboxetine and the missing data

This week Beate Wieseler from IQWiG (Institut für Qualität und Wirtschaftlichkeit im Gesundheitswesen) tells us how they uncovered data on the antidepressant reboxetine. Also Angela Thomas and Julia Anderson, haematologists from the Comprehensive Care Haemophilia and Thrombosis Centre, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, explain how to investigate a child who bruises easily.

Aug 28, 201325 min

Hyper hypo

In this week’s podcast Jayati Das-Munshi, from the Institute of Psychiatry, London, talks about her study into the mental health effects of ethnic density. Also, hyper/hypo - antonyms that can sound almost identical. Adam Frankel and Phillip Vecchio from the Princess Alexandra Hospital in Woolloongabba, Australia, explain their their plan to do away with these troublesome prefixes.

Aug 28, 201319 min
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android