
With head and heart and hand
Portraits of 20th century British doctors by Nick Sinclair
BMJ No 7085 Volume 314 Saturday 29 March 1997
This Week in BMJ | Editor's Choice | Press releases | Advertisement details
- Editorials
- 913
The promise of cloning for human medicine
Robert Winston
914
Reducing morbidity from chest drains
Jonathan Hyde, Timothy Sykes, Timothy Graham
915
Discrimination, informed consent, and the HIV infected clinician
Ronald Bayer
916
Removing bias in surgical trials
A G Johnson, J Michael Dixon
918
Ultrasonographic "soft markers" of fetal chromosomal
defects
Martin Whittle
-
News
- 919
US firm admits tobacco causes cancer
* PVS criteria questioned in court case
* Consultant surgeon told to stop operating
* Contraception use increasing worldwide
* Institute for ethics launched in US
* Five apples a day ...
* Spanish flu virus identified
* Global TB epidemic levelling off
* Culture of data privacy is needed
* Gulf war records wrongly withheld
* GPs criticise review body chairman
* Prison sentence brought on anorexia
* Relief effort starts in Albania
* Ontario attacked over hospital closures
* Luisa Brumana, medical student leader, profiled
-
Papers
- 925
Cohort study of association of risk of breast cancer with cyst type
in
women with gross cystic disease of the breast
Paolo Bruzzi, Luigi Dogliotti, Carlo
Naldoni, Lauro Bucchi, Massimo Costantini,
Alessandra Cicognani, Mirella Torta, Gian
Franco Buzzi, Alberto Angeli
929
Retirement on grounds of ill health: cross sectional survey in six
organisations in United Kingdom
C J M Poole
932
A controlled study of fluoxetine and cognitive-behavioural
counselling
in the treatment of postnatal depression
Louis Appleby, Rachel Warner, Anna
Whitton, Brian Faragher
936
Cross sectional study of contribution of clinical assessment and
simple
cardiac investigations to diagnosis of left ventricular systolic
dysfunction in patients admitted with acute dyspnoea
Neil D Gillespie, Graeme McNeill, Terence
Pringle, Simon Ogston, Allan D Struthers,
Stuart D Pringle
940
Examination of attendance patterns before and after introduction of
South Africa's policy of free health care for children aged under 6
years and pregnant women
David Wilkinson, Marlene E Sach, Salim S
Abdool Karim
- 941
Commentary: Should mother and child health services in
developing countries be free? Anthony Costello
-
General practice
- 942
Interpractice audit of diagnosis and management of hypertension in
primary care: educational intervention and review of medical records
Mahendra Mashru, Ariel Lant
-
Information in practice
- 947
Obtaining useful information from expert based sources
David C Slawson, Allen F Shaughnessy
950
Information retrieval for patient care
Martin Gardner
954
Netlines
Mark Pallen
-
Clinical review
- 955
Science, medicine, and the future: Non-insulin dependent diabetes
mellitus: the gathering storm
Stephen O'Rahilly
960
ABC of clinical haematology: Multiple myeloma and related
conditions
Charles R J Singer
- Education and debate
- 964
Self monitoring of glucose by people with diabetes: evidence based
practice
Marilyn Gallichan
967
The rationing debate: Central government should have a greater role
in
rationing decisions:
The case for
Jo Lenaghan
970
The rationing debate: Central government should have a greater role
in
rationing decisions: The case against
Stephen Harrison
-
Letters
- 974
Trends in NHS expenditure
M G Dunnigan
974
Poor recruitment to lung cancer trials
R T Penson and R M Rudd
975
Fatal methadone overdose
E W Benbow and others
975
GP cooperatives
J York; J Rawlinson; N Lattey; D A G C Robertson;
K
McKenna; P Holmes
976
Catching glaucoma
F M Chapman and P S Phelan
977
Cyclists should wear helmets
B Pless and R Davis
977
Depression and the menopause
J Studd; M Hunter
978
Circaseptennial rhythm is an artefact
M J Campbell
978
Comorbidity increases benefit of anticoagulation in patients with
atrial fibrillation
S Morgan
978
Psychological rehabilitation after myocardial infarction
C Pither and A C Williams; J M Noon; D A
Jones
and R West
979
Rehabilitation after heart attack
C Bundy
980
A framework for priority setting
A Scott and others
980
Internet server with targeted access would cure information
deficiency
in developing countries
R E LaPorte
980
Empowering doctors in the developing world
R Macrorie
-
Obituaries
- 981
A G Apley, V Bowers, S Brown, J B
Cadas,
D L Rees, Correction: C H Edwards
-
Medicopolitical digest
- 982
Primary care receives royal assent * GPs' Easter campaign
* Mental
health services * BMA's annual report
-
Personal views
- 983 Breakthroughs and wars
George Dunea
Education or training: medicine's learning agenda
Zo|f5-Jane Playdon and Dan|f5 Goodsman
-
Medicine and the media
- 984 Pain, pus, and blood
James Drife
-
Medicine and books
- 985 When the Air Hits Your Brain. Tales of Neurosurgery
Frank
Vertosick Jr
M P Powell
Who Has Seen a Blood Sugar? Reflections on Medical Education
Frank Davidoff
Julian Tudor Hart
-
Minerva
- 986
-
- S2
Career Focus Classified supplement
On
the early career choices of medical graduates Jon Ford
Editor's choice
Exciting challenges: Dolly and POEMS
- Over the past few weeks Dolly, the cloned sheep,
has provoked ribaldry from satirists, headlines about a master race of
humans from tabloid newspapers, and a "knee jerk political
reaction" from the president of the United States. As the furore
has
died down, more measured reactions seem to be setting in - from the
House of Commons science and technology committee and from Robert
Winston, our editorialist (p 913). Winston shows how complex are the
issues that Dolly raises and how potentially useful cloning techniques
might prove. The production of Dolly, he says, "should not be seen
as
a moral threat but rather as an exciting challenge."
A more mundane challenge is thrown down by C J M Poole's study of
ill health retirement in six large organisations in the UK (p 929). He
finds large variations in the rates of retirement on grounds of ill
health. In four organsations the most popular time for opting for ill
health retirement coincided with enhancements in benefit, so he
suspects that applicants may be motivated more by financial benefits
than by ill health.
Financial incentives (or disincentives) are also the
subject of a short report, which produces rather a surprising
conclusion. David Wilkinson and colleagues looked at attendance
patterns at local clinics in a district of South Africa before and
after President Nelson Mandela introduced free health care for young
children and pregnant and lactating women (p 940). Preventive services
for under 6 year olds had always been free and attendances did not
change significantly. The greatest increase occurred in attendances for
treatment services. The staff, however, complained of being overworked
and saw the increased workload as unnecessary and caused by trivial
illnesses. The authors suggest that if preventive services are already
free then a policy of free care may encourage presentation of self
limiting illness and be counterproductive. In his commentary Tony
Costello warns against such a simplistic interpretation: in other
developing countries the use of preventive services has declined when
charges have been introduced.
Finally, this week we introduce a new acronym - POEM - and
risk a
prediction that you will hear more about it in future. In their paper
on obtaining information from expert sources, David Slawson and Allen
Shaughnessy argue that useful information can be distinguished from
useless on the basis of three questions: Does the information focus on
an outcome my patients care about? Is the issue common in my practice?
Is the intervention feasible? If the answers are yes then the
information is patient orientated information that matters - a POEM.
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