BMJ Audio

Making a Difference

Listen to 3 minute interviews with our authors

Our new "Making a Difference" project highlights important issues which you feel can make a difference to health care. An expert panel helped us to choose six topics (see below).

Read the articles, listen to the three minute interviews with authors, and vote for the project that you think will make the greatest difference to health care. The winner will be announced on 25 April.

Making a Difference - topics and interviews with authors

  • Zulfiqar Bhutta on "Drug resistant infections in poor countries" - Download the mp3 audio file (3.4 Mbytes|3 minutes)
  • Iona Heath on "Multiple health problems in elderly people" - Download the mp3 audio file (3 Mbytes|3 minutes)
  • Ian Gilmore on "Excessive drinking in young women" - Download the mp3 audio file (3.4 Mbytes|3 minutes)
  • Henry McQuay on "Management of chronic pain" - Download the mp3 audio file (3 Mbytes|3 minutes)
  • Jerry Avorn on "Adverse drug reactions in elderly people" - Download the mp3 audio file (2.9 Mbytes|3 minutes)
  • Scott Murray on "Palliative care beyond cancer" - Download the mp3 audio file (3 Mbytes|3 minutes)

Archive

The BMJ Debate: Doctors and immigration
Deborah Cohen talks to Edwin Borman, Graham Winyard, and Ramesh Mehta.

The BMJ Debate: BMA and Remedy UK
Deborah Cohen talks to Ram Moorthy and Matt Jameson Evans about postgraduate medical training.

The BMJ Interview: Sir John Tooke
Tony Delamothe interviews Sir John Tooke about his report concerning junior doctors' training.

The BMJ Interview: Lord Ara Darzi
Fiona Godlee puts BMJ readers' questions to health minister Ara Darzi.

The BMJ Interview: Sir Liam Donaldson
Listen to England's chief medical officer in an interview with broadcaster Sue McGregor.

BMJ Talk Medicine: pilot
Listen to Graham Easton present a pilot magazine programme with the latest medical news, opinion, and issues that matter to doctors.




Student BMJ

Risk of surgery for inflammatory bowel disease: record linkage studies

What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+

www.student.bmj.com

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