Malaria free China, an academic medicine revolution, and retracted data's impact - podcast episode cover

Malaria free China, an academic medicine revolution, and retracted data's impact

May 07, 202537 minEp. 40
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Episode description

China was declared malaria free in 2021 - and we'll hear how persistence was key to their success, and what new technologies are available to help the rest of the world become malaria free, from Regina Rabinovich, director of the Malaria Elimination Initiative at the Barcelona Institute for Global Health. 

Sonia Saxena, professor of primary care at Imperial College London, and Miguel O’Ryan, dean of the medical faculty of the University of Chile join Kamran to talk about what broke academic medicine, and why it's time for a revolution.

New research shows that data from retracted papers is still having an alarming effect on clinical practice. Chang Xu, Hui Liu, and Fuchen Liu from the Naval Medical University in Shanghai, and Suhail Doi from Qatar University, join us to talk about their study which has maped retracted papers impact on systematic reviews and clinical guidelines. 

 

Reading list

Malaria control lessons from China

Vision 2050: a revolution in academic medicine for better health for all

Investigating the impact of trial retractions on the healthcare evidence ecosystem (VITALITY Study I)

- An example of the BMJ's approach to updating metaanalysis after a study retraction 

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Malaria free China, an academic medicine revolution, and retracted data's impact | Medicine and Science from The BMJ podcast - Listen or read transcript on Metacast