980 episódios

Leading the debate on health to engage, inform, and stimulate doctors, researchers, and other health professionals.

The BMJ Podcast BMJ Podcasts

    • Saúde e fitness
    • 4,5 • 4 avaliações

Leading the debate on health to engage, inform, and stimulate doctors, researchers, and other health professionals.

    The prospect of unemployed GPs

    The prospect of unemployed GPs

    With the anticipation of a new government in the UK, shadow health secretary Wes Streeting will hit the ground running - with a winter season (and it's inevitable crisis) and ongoing industrial desputes with junior doctors. Elisabeth Mahase ask him about his plans to handle these challenges if elected.
    We also find our selves in the puzzling situation of potential GP unemployment in the UK despite a high demand for primary care doctors, Helen Salisbury, GP and columnist for The BMJ explains how we've got into this situation.
    Finally, Peter Doshi has been looking at the financial entanglement of FDA heads with the companies they are regulating - 9 of the previous 10 FDA heads have gone on to work for industry in some respect. He has also investigated how complex financial instruments can make these conflicts more opaque.
    02:03 Anticipating a New Government and the NHS Winter Crisis10:50 The Kafkaesque Dilemma of GP Unemployment23:10 FDA Leaders' Financial Entanglements: A Deep Dive
    Reading list
    Workforce and winter under Labour: Wes Streeting on his plan for the NHS
    Helen Salisbury: No jobs for GPs—we’ll be missed when we’re gone
    Revolving doors: board memberships, hedge funds, and the FDA chiefs responsible for regulating industry

    • 34 min
    Fixing healthcare's workforce problems

    Fixing healthcare's workforce problems

    Where next for psychological safety? Amy Edmundson is professor of Leadership and Management at the Harvard Business School. Her work on psychological safety has underpinned so much quality improvement, and she joins us fresh of the stage at the International Forum on Quality and safety in healthcare to talk about the next steps in creating a safe work place.
    The BMJ has published two new investigations, looking at the alcohol and tobacco industry funding of public health and education - we’ll hear how the companies who create the problems, are now styling themselves as the solution. Rebecca Coombes joins us to explain what The BMJ has found, and May van Schalkwyk, a researcher from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, explains how commercial conflicts are shaping the wrong education tactics.
    And finally, our NHS commissioners have more recommendations - this time on workforce issues. Mary Dixon-Woods, director of THIS institute at the University of Cambridge, and Matt Morgan, intensive care consultant in Cardiff, tell the NHS to get serious about staffing.
    02:03 Amy Edmondson on Future Health and Psychological Safety10:24 The Impact of Corporate Funding on Public Health19:57 Addressing NHS Workforce Challenges: Insights and Solutions
    Reading list;
    Our new podcast - Future Health
    International forum keynote -  "Learning to fail" with Amy Edmundson and Don Berwick
    Investigation - Medscape caves in on courses funded by tobacco giant Philip Morris, while medics fear global push into medical educationInvestigation - Big alcohol: Universities and schools urged to throw out industry-funded public health advice
    Commission on the future of the NHS - The future of the NHS depends on its workforce
     
     

    • 36 min
    Improving NHS gender identity services - Hilary Cass

    Improving NHS gender identity services - Hilary Cass

    Hilary Cass, the former president of the Royal College of Paediatrics, has spent the last 3 years collating the evidence for treatment of gender questioning young people; engaging with those young people, their families and their clinicians - all with the aim of improving NHS treatment of this complex and vulnerable group.
    In this interview, Kamran Abbasi, editor in chief of The BMJ, speaks in depth to Cass about her review - about evidence base for transitioning, but also about the way in which the siloing of care for young trans people has failed them. 
    They discuss the need to support young people in their journey - Cass is clear that the NHS should allow young people to explore their gender, but that ultimately, that may not mean medical intervention at all. 
     
    Reading list
    The Cass Review - final report
    The systematic review and meta-analyses published in Archives of Disease in Childhood
    BMJ Opinion: Gender medicine for children and young people is built on shaky foundations

    • 37 min
    Derogation, an ultra processed food system, and catch up pay for the NHS

    Derogation, an ultra processed food system, and catch up pay for the NHS

    Derogation, the way in which striking doctors can be recalled to the ward to protect patient safety, was agreed by NHS England and the BMA. Now, new data The BMJ has uncovered shows that the mechanism was rarely used - and when it was tried, was often rejected. Gareth Iacobucci explains what that means about relations between the government, the NHS, and doctors.
    Felice Jacka, director of the Food & Mood Centre at Deakin University, is one of the authors of our recent ultra-processed foods umbrella review - and joins the podcast to talk about the link between diet and health; and why goverments need to pay more attention to the food system.
    Finally, John Appleby, senior associate at the Nuffield Trust, and Gillian Leng, dean and president elect of the Royal Society of medicine, have been thinking about healthcare funding, and how more stability is essential in securing the service's future.
     
    Reading list
    Hospital leaders warned that failure to recall striking doctors risked patient safety in some trusts, documents show
    Ultra-processed food exposure and adverse health outcomes
    NHS funding for a secure future
     
    Chapters
    00:31 Derogation and doctor strikes
    06:59 Ultra processed food producers and health
    13:59 Rethinking NHS funding

    • 29 min
    The future of the clinical relationship, code sharing, and a Nye-t at the theatre

    The future of the clinical relationship, code sharing, and a Nye-t at the theatre

    In this week's podcast:
     

    How AI will affect the clinician-patient relationship? Our annual Nuffield Summit roundtable asks how the promise of tech tools stacks up against reality, and how the future of the therapeutic relationship can be protected (participants below).
     

    Your code is as important as your methods, which is why The BMJ now requires you to share it - Ben Goldacre and Nick De Vito, from the Bennett Institute for Applied Data Science at the University of Oxford, explain why it's so important, and how The BMJ's new data and code sharing policy could change research transparency.
     
    Nye Bevin set up the NHS when the UK was in the economic doldrums, and the public's need for care was becoming an emergency - BMJ columnist Matt Morgan has helped turn that story into a play, currently showing at the National Theatre; and reflects on the parallels between now and then.
     
    1:58 Nuffield Summit roundtable
    17:32 New BMJ rules on data and code sharing
    29:03 Aneurin "Nye" Bevan play
     
    Taking part in our roundtable were:


    Rebecca Rosen, Senior Fellow at the Nuffield Trust and GP


    Juliet Bouverie, CEO of The Stroke Association


    Daniel Elkeles, CEO of London Ambulance Service

    Neil Sebire, Professor and Chief Research Information Officer at Great Ormond Street Hospital


    Reading list:
    How is technology changing clinician-patient relationships?
    Mandatory data and code sharing for research published by The BMJ
    Scalpels and spotlights: bringing theatre to the theatre

    • 36 min
    Retracting abortion papers, deafness in the clinic, and 70 years of a medical orchestra

    Retracting abortion papers, deafness in the clinic, and 70 years of a medical orchestra

    The U.S. Supreme Court is hearing a case on the approval of mifepristone for medical abortion - a case which could change the availability of the drug in the US, and which hinges on papers linking abortion to mental distress. However, those papers are contested (including a paper published by BMJ), and some have been retracted already - Julia Littell and Antonia Biggs tell us how that science is being used in court, and why retraction is essential.
    Awakening from anaesthetic is difficult enough, but imagine you're three and only communicate through sign language - which no one can understand. We hear from Kirsten, a mother who thinks everyone should learn at least a few key sign language phrases.
    Finally, the London Medical Orchestra is turning 70 - having had their start in The BMJ's letters pages. Stuart Delve and Peter Gough help explain the orchestra's longevity.
     
    01:00 The Supreme Court Case on Medical Abortion
    10:27 The Role of Journal Editors in Scientific Integrity
    19:54 The Impact of Deafness on Patient Experience
    30:57 The Joy of Music in a Medical Career: London Medical Orchestra
     
    References
    Analysis: Correcting the scientific record on abortion and mental health outcomes
    WYPIT: The importance of British Sign Language
    Asha's instagram for BSL tips
    London Medical Orchestra's 70th anniversary concert - 6:30pm, Sun, 10 Mar 2024
     

    • 38 min

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