

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

Apr 11, 2016 • 17min
”What’s the point in living, in a body I don’t want” - how the NHS treats trans people
James Barrett, president of the British Association of Gender Identity Specialists, and Nina, a trans woman, join us to discuss how difficult it can be for trans people to access gender clinics, and what barriers are faced by the community after their transition has been completed.
Read James Barrett's personal view:
http://www.bmj.com/content/352/bmj.i1694

Apr 8, 2016 • 23min
Budget decisions can decrease alcohol deaths in less than 18 months
Alcohol consumption has been a perennial problem, but recently The economic downturn and rises in alcohol taxation seem to have stemmed the persistent rise in associated mortality.
Nick Sheron, head of clinical herpetology at Southampton university, and one of the authors of an analysis article, explains how government fiscal policy has the ability to immediately reduce alcohol related deaths.

Apr 8, 2016 • 6min
Why the junior doctors are striking again
Abi Rimmer, BMJ Careers reporter, talks to junior doctors on the picket line at Northwick Park Hospital.
Read her report:
http://bmj.co/1qydmFq

Apr 8, 2016 • 8min
Greenwing cast explain why they’re with the junior doctors
Abi Rimmer, BMJ careers reporter, talks to the cast of hospital comedy Greenwing, who explain why they're supporting junior doctors on the picket line.
Read her report:
http://bmj.co/1oJ2W41

Apr 8, 2016 • 14min
Plan, do, study, act
Plan, do, study, act cycles, or PDSA cycles, are the basis of many quality improvement projects, they're a model to trial changes and feed the lessons from each test into the next.
Why are they a popular method, and how do you get the best out of them? And what on earth happens when they explode?
Harriet Vickers asks Julie Reed, National Institute for Healthcare Research CLAHRC (Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care) for north west London.
Read all of Julie's paper (for free): http://qualitysafety.bmj.com/content/25/3/147
Check out BMJ Quality: http://quality.bmj.com

Apr 8, 2016 • 16min
Mistakes were made
The Francis report, the Berwick report, the Keogh review - all of these have highlighted how important learning from mistakes is in healthcare.
Reporting incidents is key to this, and in this podcast Jen Perry, from BMJ Quality, tells Harriet Vickers the whats, hows and whys of incident reporting.
And Emily Hotton, previously a foundation doctor at Royal United Hospital Bath, UK, talks about how her project helped junior doctors at the hospital become more confident at incident reporting, and bumped up the number of incidents they logged.
Read Emily's full report: http://qir.bmj.com/content/3/1/u202381.w2481.full
Check out BMJ Quality: http://quality.bmj.com

Mar 31, 2016 • 3min
Médecins Sans Frontières’s Dunkirk spirit
As France has moved in recent weeks to clear camps where migrants stay while trying to cross illegally into Britain, Médecins Sans Frontières has just opened a new one.
Sophie Arie talks to Caroline Gollé, medical coordinator at the Médecins Sans Frontières La Linière camp.
Read more about the camp:
http://www.bmj.com/content/352/bmj.i1696

Mar 24, 2016 • 17min
How and when to treat depression in pregnancy
Depression in pregnancy affects up to 10% of women, a rate only slightly lower than in the postpartum period. Yet, as few as 20% of pregnant women with depression receive adequate treatment.
Louise Howard, professor in women’s mental health at King's College London, joins us to discuss the clinical review on depression in pregnancy.
Read the full article:
http://www.bmj.com/content/352/bmj.i1547

Mar 24, 2016 • 16min
Should doctors boycott working in Australia’s immigration detention centres?
However well intentioned, working in detention centres amounts to complicity in torture, says David Berger, a district medical officer in emergency medicine at Broome Hospital in Australia.
However, Steven Miles, chair in bioethics at the University of Minnesota thinks that they play an important role in telling the world about conditions in these camps.
Read the full debate:
http://www.bmj.com/content/352/bmj.i1600

Mar 23, 2016 • 20min
Jeremy Hunt Interview
Jeremy Hunt is a health secretary under pressure. In this exclusive interview with The BMJ’s editor in chief Fiona Godlee, the man who could soon become England's longest serving health secretary insists he has more to give.
The steady hand brought in to steer the NHS away from the front pages has been shaking in recent months, but the grip seems to be intact. As he greets The BMJ in his Whitehall office, Jeremy Hunt does not betray the signs of a man buckling under the pressure despite a tumultuous few months that have left many NHS staff feeling downtrodden, battered, and
bruised—and that have brought calls for his resignation after he was rebuked for misrepresenting data published in The BMJ to support the case for seven day working in the NHS.
Read Gareth Iacobucci's report of the interview:
http://www.bmj.com/content/352/bmj.i1632


