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Plant of the Week: Lilium regale

Posted on July 2, 2007 by BMJ

Oscar Wilde adored lilies. He gave them away extravagantly, and he would wear a gilded lily in preference even to a green carnation. His contemporaries picture him as a vast, sensual creature, swaying about with a purple complexion and replete with heavy, decadent perfume. Such is the regal lily. […]

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JAMA 20 Jun 2007 Vol 297

Posted on June 24, 2007 by BMJ

Fans of The Rational Clinical Examination, once the best series in any medical journal, are having their patience tested a bit of late. Does This Patient Have Erythema Migrans? is a question of prior probability and pattern recognition, with no gold standard that allows us to answer with a tick. […]

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NEJM 21 Jun 2007 Vol 356

Posted on June 24, 2007 by BMJ

Dracunculiasis is a most ornamental word, but the little dragon to which it refers – the guinea worm – is a horrible parasite which, thanks to a lot of humble effort in remote communities, is on the verge of extinction. […]

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BMJ 23 Jun 2007 Vol 334

Posted on June 24, 2007 by BMJ

Sciatica is a clinical diagnosis which is usually easy to make but hard to manage. This worthy Dutch review can find no evidence that any form of analgesia works, and claims that CT is as good as MRI at detecting disc herniation […]

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Lancet 23 Jun 2007 Vol 369

Posted on June 24, 2007 by BMJ

Diastolic dysfunction is a diabolically dysfunctional subject: scarcely any two accounts agree, and the very mention of it can cause British cardiologists to foam at the mouth. […]

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Ann Intern Med 19 Jun 2007 Vol 146

Posted on June 24, 2007 by BMJ

Even before the virtual demise of hormone replacement therapy, soy was promoted as a “natural” alternative on the basis that Japanese women eat a lot of it and allegedly don’t get menopausal symptoms. […]

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Plant of the Week: Philadelphus “Sybille”

Posted on June 24, 2007 by BMJ

I am not sure why the great tribe of mock orange shrubs is named after brotherly love: the charms of this one suggest another sort of love altogether, and very much the feminine form of it. […]

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One in five juniors has considered over MTAS suicide, survey shows

Posted on June 23, 2007 by BMJ

Preliminary results of a survey conducted by the Royal College of Psychiatrists indicate that as many as one in five junior doctors applying for posts through MTAS have considered suicide over the ‘deeply flawed’ process, The Daily Telegraph reports today. […]

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Academics join forces to highlight plight of brightest medics

Posted on June 20, 2007 by BMJ

Academics from Cambridge University have joined forces to highlight the plight of some of the most academically gifted doctors who they say are losing out under the MTAS interview process. […]

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JAMA 13 Jun 2007 Vol 297

Posted on June 17, 2007 by BMJ

Do you pay attention to the haematocrit? In case you’d forgotten, it should lie between 39% and 54%, and in case you thought it’s a waste of time, here is a study to prove otherwise. […]

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