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British Medical Journal
A collection of lectures by editors of the BMJ.
British Medical Journal Lectures
- An old fart attempts to impart wisdom to bright young things
- Beyond evidence based practice
- bmj.com: new initiatives
- BMJ Publishing Group: an introduction
- Communicating health information in low and middle income countries
- Communicating health information in low and middle income countries (In Georgian 14811) translated by Malkhaz Jalagonia
- Conflict of interest: an editor’s jaundiced view
- Conflict of interest: journals, guidelines, and specialist societies
- Conflict of interest: my journey
- Doctors and leadership: oil and water?
- Does your journal have any influence?
- Editorial misconduct: time to act
- Ethical issues in publishing research and ethics committees
- Ethics of Publishing: Balancing the routine and revolutionary
- Evidence and scientific communication
- Evidence based practice (not medicine): perspectives of an editor
- Fraud in medical research
- Globalisation of the empowered health care consumer
- Has there been any progress in exposing and dealing with editorial misconduct?
- How editors like their papers
- How the BMJ triages submitted manuscripts
- If I were the editor in chief of the Cochrane Collaboration…
- Impact of PubMed Central on bmj.com
- Information Mastery: Evidence-Based Medicine in Everyday Practice
- Informing health professionals, protecting patients
- Is medicine corrupt? Part I
- Is the relationship between the industry and prescribers (doctors) in trouble? Part I
- Is transparency is fundamental to quality in health care?
- Knowledge access and sharing. An overview of access models. Part I
- Knowledge management and information and communication technology
- Muckraking is an honourable trade
- Partnerships in paediatrics: renegotiating the contract
- Publication bias in clinical trials
- Publication ethics: an embarrassing amount of room for improvement
- Reducing medical error and increasing patient safety
- Reflections of an editor on research and practice?
- Reporting on patient safety and medical errors
- Research misconduct and biomedical journals
- The evolution of peer review: e-developments
- The future for medical education: speculation and possible implications
- The future of biomedical publishing with a few extra thoughts Part I.
- The future of health care
- The future of medical journals
- The inside view on writing for medical journals
- The pharmaceutical industry’s influence on medical publishing
- The role of journals in promoting prevention (beyond the publication of original research)
- The role of peer reviewed journals in providing information for doctors and patients
- The role of peer reviewed journals in providing information for doctors and patients(In Chinese 14991) The translation in Chinese was made by Jiangbo Wang, professor of PUMC & Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences
- The role of the general practitioner in tomorrow’s world
- The Tavistock Principles for everybody in health care
- The unhappiness of doctors: policy implications
- The work of COPE (Committee on Publication Ethics)
- Too much medicine?
- Trying to meet the information needs of doctors
- Trying to meet the information needs of doctors (In Georgian 14791) translated by Malkhaz Jalagonia
- Universities and Mammon: an editor’s reflections
- What future for medical journals?
- What information I would want as a patient (and what I’d get in Britain)
- Where are the limits of medicine: are we turning the whole world into patients?
- Who stands behind the word?
- Why I published "the albumin paper": confession of a buccaneering editor