• The BMJ iPad app brings you the best of print and online, including live links to the latest news, blogs, video, and podcasts. Get the BMJ iPad app.
  • Find out how study types differ in our How to read a paper section.
  • Gastroenterology updates: Access the latest gastroenterology resources from across BMJ Group, including articles, learning modules, podcasts, and blogs.
  • OPEN ACCESS: All research articles are freely available online, with no word limit. Find out more about the BMJ's open access policy. Submit your paper.
  • Keep up to date with diabetes: Access the latest diabetes resources from across BMJ Group, including articles, learning modules, podcasts, and blogs.
  • Keep up to date with cardiology: Access the latest cardiovascular medicine resources from across BMJ Group.
  • Hot topics: We regularly publish more than one article on the same subject simultaneously. Find out more on our article clusters page.
  • Dementia: Access the latest dementia resources from across BMJ Group, including articles, learning modules, podcasts, and blogs.
  • Neurology updates: Access the latest neurology resources from BMJ Group, including articles, learning modules, podcasts, and blogs.
  • Infectious diseases: Access the latest infectious disease resources from across BMJ Group, including articles, learning modules, podcasts, and blogs.
  • Updates from bmj.com: Get RSS feeds of latest articles published at bmj.com/rss

Latest from the BMJ

Research News: Domestic violence is common among women in fracture clinics

Feature: Unsafe abortion: why restricting abortive drugs only makes a bad situation worse

Research News: The end of universal screening for intimate partner violence?

Analysis: Women prisoners

Editorial: Common sense gun policy reforms for the United States

Practice: Post-traumatic stress disorder

Editorial: The medical management of problem gamblers

Editorial: Responding to domestic violence in primary care

Editorial: Seeking a better world for women and girls

Head to Head: Has child protection become a form of madness? No

See more »