BMJ  2005;331 (26 November), doi:10.1136/bmj.331.7527.0-f

Editor's choice

One medicine?

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

The threat of an influenza pandemic in humans and the deaths of millions of birds around the world brings the link between human and animal health sharply into focus. Now is a good time to consider the wider connections between animal and human health and to think about how the medical and veterinary professions might work more closely together for the benefit of patients of all species. This joint issue of the BMJ and the Veterinary Record is an attempt to do that. You can access all this week's articles—in both the BMJ and the Veterinary Record—free of charge online. There are cross links between the Veterinary Record website (www.bvapublications.com) and the BMJ website (www.bmj.com).

When doctors think about the relation between animals and human health, they tend to focus mainly on the hazards animals pose to humans. Those threats are real enough—see for instance . . . [Full text of this article]

Graham Easton, assistant editor

(geaston@bmj.com)

Martin Alder, editor

Veterinary Record (editorial@bva-edit.co.uk)


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Rapid Responses:

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We need a radical change in our philosophy as doctors
Chandrashekar Gangaraju
bmj.com, 25 Nov 2005 [Full text]
Martin Alder's email address - correction
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bmj.com, 29 Nov 2005 [Full text]
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