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BMJ No 7104 Volume 315 Saturday 9 August 1997 This Week in BMJ | Editor's Choice | Press releases
Editorials
321
Acute otitis media in children
322
Kawasaki disease
324
Clinical guidelines
325
Why Britain's drug czar mustn't wage war on drugs
326
Educating doctors, to improve patient care
News
327
Row over force feeding of dementia patients
Papers
333
Systematic review of role of polymerase chain reaction in defining
infectiousness among people infected with hepatitis C virus
338
Evaluation of validity of British anthropometric reference data for
assessing nutritional state of elderly people in Edinburgh: cross
sectional study
341
Reduced final height and indications for insulin resistance in 20 year
olds born small for gestational age: regional cohort study
347
Survey of occupancy of paediatric intensive care units by children who are dependent on ventilators
348
Comparison of blood or urine testing by patients with newly diagnosed
non-insulin dependent diabetes: patient survey after randomised
crossover trial
General practice 350 Reattendance and complications in a randomised trial of prescribing strategies for sore throat: the medicalising effect of prescribing antibiotics P Little, C Gould, I Williamson, G Warner, M Gantley, A L Kinmonth 353
Finance, not learning needs, makes general practitioners attend
courses: a database survey
Clinical review 354 Recent advances: Otorhinolaryngology Jochen A Werner, Stefan Gottschlich 358
ABC of mental health: Addiction and dependence - II: Alcohol
Education and debate
361
The search for evidence of effective health promotion
364
How to read a paper: Statistics for the non-statistician. I: Different
types of data need different statistical tests
Letters
367
Obstructive sleep apnoea
370
Hazards of running a marathon
370
Unexpected findings of study of selegiline have not been treated with
caution its authors advised
370
Drug treatment for benign prostatic hyperplasia
371
Criticism of prophylaxis of gastrointestinal bleeding with
H2 receptor antagonists is wrong
372
Treatment of pregnant women with recurrent miscarriage associated with
phospholipid antibodies
373
Casualties of Gulf war were higher than most reports suggest
Obituaries 374 H Bound, R Cutler, R P Ellman, A C Gee, J L A Kurowski Views & reviews Soundings
375
The moment
Personal view
375 Dislocations in the European Union
Tired all the time
Medicine and books
377 Managing Family Planning in General Practice
Clinical Effectiveness and Primary Care Minerva 378 S2 Career Focus Classified supplement Producing a regional guide to house jobs Andrew Smith, Cynthia Cummings Editor's choiceA battlefield of medicineDid anybody ever go into general practice for a quiet life? If they did, they must be disappointed. General practice is one of the battlefields of medicine. The armies of patients have always been there, but armies of researchers, evidence based medicine enthusiasts, educators, sociologists, politicians, and policy wonks have now crossed and recrossed the territory. They leave flattened earth in this issue of the journal.Antibiotics have been one of the blessings of medicine and general practice. But research on infectious disease in general practice is showing a much more complicated picture. Azeem Majeed and Tess Harris review a series of papers that the BMJ has been publishing that suggest that antibiotics produce only small benefit in children with acute otitis media (p 321). Meanwhile, a randomised controlled trial of different approaches for prescribing antibiotics to patients with sore throat suggests that the main outcome of immediate prescribing is that you make the patients more likely to come back again (p 350). You don't do much for the sore throat. How can general practitioners keep up with all these changes? The British government decided in 1990 that it would pay general practitioners to attend continuing education. Now it may be time to scrap the payment and find better ways of educating general practitioners. A study from Scotland suggests that financial considerations rather than learning needs are dictating where doctors go for their education (p 353) - and many end up asleep in lectures funded by pharmaceutical companies rather than interacting in the small groups that educators tell us are most effective. Peter Toon calls for a radical rethink (p 326). Back in the surgery the age old problems of medicine remain. Continuity of care, says Liam Farrell, general practitioner from Crossmaglen, "is one of the more sensible mantras of academic general practice" (p 375). But he warns of its dark side - the day when the partner/locum/consultant says: "Hey, that guy's a classic case; how did you miss that he is hypothyroid/acromegalic/growing two heads?" It's easy, answers Farrell. "The second head starts as a tiny bump, classically on the right shoulder, where the parrot usually sits; two weeks later it's a wee bit bigger, then slowly over the years it grows until before you know it, like Robert Browning envying you guys waking in England and saying one morning, 'unaware/That the lowest boughs of the brushwood sheaf/Round the elmtree bole are in tiny leaf,' you've got a fully grown second head giving you cheeky backtalk." Farrell describes the difficulty of removing it - you may have to "hack and hack and hack and hack, just like when you butcher a hog." What can I say? Only, that if you can write like Farrell you can break the rules and write sentences 79 words long - 66 more than the Daily Telegraph allows.
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