

Medicine and Science from The BMJ
The BMJ
The BMJ brings you interviews with the people who are shaping medicine and science around the world.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Oct 28, 2016 • 20min
Catherine Calderwood’s realistic medicine
Catherine Calderwood has been chief medical officer for Scotland since March 2015 - her first CMO report, which she titled “Realistic Medicine” has created a stir beyond the borders of Scotland. The BMJ, sat down with Catherine at a the Preventing Overdiagnosis conference to find out what she intended with that report.
Read more:
http://www.bmj.com/content/355/bmj.i5455

Oct 21, 2016 • 20min
Middle East respiratory syndrome
Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) is an acute viral respiratory tract infection caused by the novel betacoronavirus.
Cases have been limited to the Arabian Peninsula and its surrounding countries, and to travellers from the Middle East or their contacts.
The clinical spectrum of infection varies from no symptoms or mild respiratory symptoms to severe, rapidly progressive pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome, septic shock, or multiorgan failure resulting in death.
In this podcast Sarah Shalhoub, infectious diseases consultant at King Fahad Armed Forces Hospital, in Saudi Arabia joins us to discuss the history of the disease, clinical presentation, and what can be done to support those infected.
Read the full clinical update:
http://www.bmj.com/content/355/bmj.i5281

Oct 11, 2016 • 22min
Beyond data sharing - ”It was me who got my research team out of jail... that’s my data”
Elizabeth Pisani, visiting senior research fellow at King's College London, collects data on sex workers and injecting drug users in low and middle income countries.
For years she has been sharing her data, and joins us to explain why she went from being protective of her research to to making it freely available - and talk about some of the practicalities of keeping participants anonymous.
Read the full analysis:
http://www.bmj.com/content/355/bmj.i5295

Oct 7, 2016 • 17min
Head to head - Should all GPs be NHS employees?
Independent contractor status creates unnecessary stress, argues Azeem Majeed, GP partner and professor of primary care at Imperial College London.
Laurence Buckman, GP partner and former head of the BMA GP committee, values his autonomy and distance from a non-benign employer.
Read the full head to head:
http://www.bmj.com/content/355/bmj.i5064
We also hear from former columnist and current partner in a federated practice, Des Spence, who thinks that the days of small GP surgeries are numbered.
Independent or employed? There is a third way. . .
http://www.bmj.com/content/355/bmj.i5329

Oct 6, 2016 • 50min
Preventing Overdiagnosis In Barcelona
The Preventing Overdiagnosis conference is part of The BMJ's campaign against Too Much Medicine.
Helen Macdonald clinical editor for The BMJ was at the conference, and talked to some of the key speakers there about what they believe the key issues are, and what's being done to roll back the harms of too much medicine.
http://www.bmj.com/too-much-medicine
http://www.preventingoverdiagnosis.net/

Sep 23, 2016 • 19min
Living kidney donation
Globally each year more than 30 000 people become living kidney donors. Living kidney donation is constantly evolving, with new ways of pooling donors and recipients to maximise opportunity. With increased numbers, there is increasing information regarding the long term outcomes associated with donation.
Pippa Bailey, clinical lecturer in renal medicine at the University of Bristol, and Aisling Courtney, consultant nephrologist at Belfast City Hospital join us to explain who can donate, to whom, and the possible impact of donation on the donor’s health.
Read the full update:
http://www.bmj.com/content/354/bmj.i4746

Sep 16, 2016 • 19min
The ethics of placebo
In a clinical trial, we usually think of risk in terms of the new active compound - will it have unwanted effects. However, two analyses in The BMJ are concerned about the risk associated with the control arm.
Robin Emsley is a professor of psychiatry at Stellenbosch University in South Africa, he and colleagues have written about the risk associated with forgoing treatment in patients with schizophrenia.
Read the full analysis: http://www.bmj.com/content/354/bmj.i4728
Jonathan Mendel, lecturer in human geography at the University of Dundee, and Ben Goldacre, senior clinical research fellow at the University of Oxford, have examined the ethical approval given to trials, and are concerned that identified risks are not adequately communicated to patients.
Read the full analysis: http://www.bmj.com/content/354/bmj.i4626

Sep 9, 2016 • 12min
Ghostwriting redefined
Alastair Matheson, independant consultant and former ghostwriter, describes how the pharmaceutical publications industry seeks to legitimise ghostwriting by changing its definition while deflecting attention from wider marketing practices in academic publishing.
Read his full analysis:
http://www.bmj.com/content/354/bmj.i4578

Sep 8, 2016 • 11min
Reprehensible, but the people carrying out atrocities have very low rates of mental disorders
Oversimplification and lack of evidence stigmatise people with mental illness and impede prevention efforts, says Simon Wessley, professor of psychiatry at King's College London, in an editorial published on thebmj.com.
Read the full editorial:
http://www.bmj.com/content/354/bmj.i4869

Sep 8, 2016 • 24min
Late effects of anticancer chemotherapy: It’s hard to trust your body, after it’s betrayed you
Lily was diagnosed at 14 years old with stage four Hodgkin's lymphoma and received six rounds of chemotherapy and two weeks of radiotherapy. She survived but now lives with the long term effects of that therapy - and joins us to discuss how it has impacted her quality of life.
We're also joined by Saif Ahmad and Thankamma Ajithkumar, oncologists from Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, who give advice for generalists on late effects of anticancer chemotherapy that may affect quality of life.
Read the full clinical review:
http://www.bmj.com/content/354/bmj.i4567


