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Medical Journal News

[World Report] NHS England to be axed

Lancet - Sat, 2025-03-22 00:00
After a series of senior departures from NHS England, the UK Prime Minister has caused shockwaves by abolishing the body entirely. Jacqui Thornton reports.
Categories: Medical Journal News

[World Report] Misleading marketing claims fuel tapentadol prescriptions

Lancet - Sat, 2025-03-22 00:00
German drugmaker Grünenthal pushed its latest opioid as a safer option. People around the world got hooked. Madlen Davies, Hristio Boytchev, and Rafael Cabrera report.
Categories: Medical Journal News

[Perspectives] The injustice of tuberculosis

Lancet - Sat, 2025-03-22 00:00
Why would John Green, a best-selling American novelist, write a book about tuberculosis? The answer can be found in his new book Everything is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection. In this highly readable book, Green writes about how he saw first-hand and learnt that “tuberculosis is both a form and expression of injustice”, and decided to do something about it. The book focuses on the story of Henry Reider, a young tuberculosis patient in Sierra Leone, and his journey to recover from drug-resistant tuberculosis.
Categories: Medical Journal News

[Perspectives] Wolves and women's bodies

Lancet - Sat, 2025-03-22 00:00
“Girls' bodies were fair game”, Sarah Moss writes. “You all knew which were the gropey dads…whom you shouldn't visit when the grandfather was there.” The teenage girls protected each other, she says, until they could not. “Jen's dad's got Cathy in the spare room and we can't get in. Be quiet, Suzy's dad said, the man's a doctor, you could ruin his career saying things like that.” Moss is well admired as a writer of fiction and non-fiction, but My Good Bright Wolf: A Memoir is distinct. Born in Glasgow and brought up in England, the book explores her early life and its adult repercussions.
Categories: Medical Journal News

[Obituary] Cecile Richards

Lancet - Sat, 2025-03-22 00:00
Former President of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America and defender of sexual and reproductive health and rights. Born on July 15, 1957, in Waco, TX, USA, she died from glioblastoma in New York City, NY, USA, on Jan 20, 2025, aged 67 years.
Categories: Medical Journal News

[Department of Error] Department of Error

Lancet - Sat, 2025-03-22 00:00
Bretherton CP, Achten J, Jogarah V, et al. Early versus delayed weight-bearing following operatively treated ankle fracture (WAX): a non-inferiority, multicentre, randomised controlled trial. Lancet 2024; 403: 2787–97—In this Article, the spelling of author Henry Claireaux's name has been corrected. This correction has been made to the online version as of March 20, 2025
Categories: Medical Journal News

[Therapeutics] Calcitonin gene-related peptide-targeted therapy in migraine: current role and future perspectives

Lancet - Sat, 2025-03-22 00:00
Almost 40 years ago, the discovery of the vasoactive neuropeptide calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and its role in migraine pathophysiology ushered in a new era in migraine treatment. Since 2018, monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) targeting the CGRP pathway are available for migraine prevention. The approval of these drugs marks a pioneering development, as they are the first pharmacological agents specifically tailored for migraine prevention. Introduction of these agents contrasts the historical reliance on traditional preventive medications initially formulated for other indications and later repurposed for migraine therapy.
Categories: Medical Journal News

Red Urine after Administration of Hydroxocobalamin

NEJM Current Issue - Fri, 2025-03-21 18:33
New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 392, Issue 12, March 27, 2025.
Categories: Medical Journal News

[Correspondence] Guillain–Barré syndrome outbreak in Pune: a health emergency

Lancet - Fri, 2025-03-21 16:30
The recent outbreak of Guillain–Barré syndrome in Pune (India) has become a matter of increasing national concern and has warranted the involvement of international agencies.1 As of March 8, 2025, the total number of Guillain–Barré syndrome cases in Pune was 225, with 197 confirmed diagnoses and 28 suspected cases, and can be considered as one of the largest Guillain–Barré syndrome outbreaks.2,3 The death toll has risen to 23 people in India, and Pune continues to be the worst affected with 11 deaths from Guillain–Barré syndrome.
Categories: Medical Journal News

Ian Bownes: forensic psychiatrist who assessed mental fitness of IRA hunger strikers in the Maze prison

BMJ - British Medical Journal - Fri, 2025-03-21 07:06
bmj;388/mar21_10/r565/FAF1faAt the height of the Troubles in the early 1980s Ian Bownes, a young trainee psychiatrist in Northern Ireland, was sent into the notorious H blocks in Belfast’s Maze prison to assess if its paramilitary inmates were mentally fit to go on hunger strikes.It would have been an unsettling experience for anyone to go inside the Maze, which mainly housed republican prisoners. For a young Protestant like Bownes, however, it must have been even tougher. That Bownes did so for many years spoke to his “quiet heroism,” how much his professional opinion was valued, and how fully he was trusted to uphold the confidentiality on which his access depended, says friend and former colleague Harry Kennedy, a professor of forensic psychiatry at the University of Dublin.When Bownes first went into the Maze, republican prisoners were escalating a campaign of protest against the British government. This included demands to reinstate special...
Categories: Medical Journal News

Risk factor analysis and creation of an externally-validated prediction model for perioperative stroke following non-cardiac surgery: A multi-center retrospective and modeling study

PLOS Medicine recently published - Fri, 2025-03-21 07:00

by Yulong Ma, Siyuan Liu, Faqiang Zhang, Xuhui Cong, Bingcheng Zhao, Miao Sun, Huikai Yang, Min Liu, Peng Li, Yuxiang Song, Jiangbei Cao, Yingfu Li, Wei Zhang, Kexuan Liu, Jiaqiang Zhang, Weidong Mi

Background

Perioperative stroke is a serious and potentially fatal complication following non-cardiac surgery. Thus, it is important to identify the risk factors and develop an effective prognostic model to predict the incidence of perioperative stroke following non-cardiac surgery.

Methods and findings

We identified potential risk factors and built a model to predict the incidence of perioperative stroke using logistic regression derived from hospital registry data of adult patients that underwent non-cardiac surgery from 2008 to 2019 at The First Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital. Our model was then validated using the records of two additional hospitals to demonstrate its clinical applicability. In our hospital cohorts, 223,415 patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery were included in this study with 525 (0.23%) patients experiencing a perioperative stroke. Thirty-three indicators including several intraoperative variables had been identified as potential risk factors. After multi-variate analysis and stepwise elimination (P < 0.05), 13 variables including age, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) classification, hypertension, previous stroke, valvular heart disease, preoperative steroid hormones, preoperative β-blockers, preoperative mean arterial pressure, preoperative fibrinogen to albumin ratio, preoperative fasting plasma glucose, emergency surgery, surgery type and surgery length were screened as independent risk factors and incorporated to construct the final prediction model. Areas under the curve were 0.893 (95% confidence interval (CI) [0.879, 0.908]; P < 0.001) and 0.878 (95% CI [0.848, 0.909]; P < 0.001) in the development and internal validation cohorts. In the external validation cohorts derived from two other independent hospitals, the areas under the curve were 0.897 and 0.895. In addition, our model outperformed currently available prediction tools in discriminative power and positive net benefits. To increase the accessibility of our predictive model to doctors and patients evaluating perioperative stroke, we published an online prognostic software platform, 301 Perioperative Stroke Risk Calculator (301PSRC). The main limitations of this study included that we excluded surgical patients with an operation duration of less than one hour and that the construction and external validation of our model were from three independent retrospective databases without validation from prospective databases and non-Chinese databases.

Conclusions

In this work, we identified 13 independent risk factors for perioperative stroke and constructed an effective prediction model with well-supported external validation in Chinese patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery. The model may provide potential intervention targets and help to screen high-risk patients for perioperative stroke prevention.

Categories: Medical Journal News

Two hundred NHS hospitals to get solar panels from Great British Energy

BMJ - British Medical Journal - Fri, 2025-03-21 06:51
Great British Energy, a new, publicly owned company created by the government, is to invest £200m to fit solar panels to the roofs of 200 NHS hospitals and 200 schools in England. The aim is to cut costs and carbon and make key areas of the public sector less dependent on the uncertain energy market. The programme is expected to save £400m over the lifetime of the panels (30 years), with savings reinvested in the NHS and education. The NHS spends an estimated £1.4bn a year on energy, a figure that has more than doubled since 2019.The programme is expected to last two years, and the first panels should be on NHS sites and schools by the end of summer 2025. The educational component of the programme will focus on schools in deprived areas, particularly in the north east, north west, and west Midlands.Mark Harber, special adviser on healthcare sustainability...
Categories: Medical Journal News

Impact of child weight management pilots was hindered by poor uptake, evaluation finds

BMJ - British Medical Journal - Fri, 2025-03-21 06:50
Weight management programmes for obese or overweight children may be effective, but their impact has been hampered by low uptake and completion rates, an evaluation of eight pilot projects across England has suggested.1A report from the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities evaluated eight projects funded through a £4.2m government grant in July 2021, which piloted extended brief interventions (EBIs) and expansion of behavioural weight management services for children aged 2 to 19 and their families.EBIs involve a practitioner discussing a child’s weight and growth with their parent or carer, and can include the use of behaviour change techniques, tailored support, and onward referral to services. Weight management services usually involve 12 week programmes and include diet and physical activity guidance. Their primary aim is weight maintenance and growing into a healthier weight, rather than weight loss.The pilots were funded for a year and took place across several areas in...
Categories: Medical Journal News

Tuberculosis: WHO warns of &#x201C;crippling breakdowns&#x201D; in response after funding cuts

BMJ - British Medical Journal - Fri, 2025-03-21 05:21
The World Health Organization (WHO) has called for an urgent international public health response as tuberculosis (TB) funding cuts threaten to reverse two decades of progress in containing the world’s deadliest infectious disease.The UN health agency said that it was particularly concerned about services in the world’s worst affected nations collapsing, allowing the respiratory disease to spread almost unabated.More than a million people died from TB last year, but that number is expected to rise sharply as public health systems, particularly in Africa, are no longer able to diagnose, treat, and monitor the disease. WHO warned that the situation could quickly deteriorate, as 27 countries faced “crippling breakdowns” in their TB response as funding cuts hit every stage of detection, treatment, and prevention.“The huge gains the world has made against TB over the past 20 years are now at risk as cuts to funding start to disrupt access to services...
Categories: Medical Journal News

Judge blocks DOGE cuts to USAID

BMJ - British Medical Journal - Fri, 2025-03-21 03:50
A US judge has blocked drastic job cuts to the US Agency for International Development (USAID).On 18 March Judge Theodore Chuang of the US District Court for Maryland ruled that the moves—which effectively shut the agency—had probably violated the US constitution. The case was brought by more than 20 current and former USAID employees and contractors.The fired employees are not back at work but have been placed on paid administrative leave. The judge said the fast shutdown of the agency “deprived the public’s elected representatives in Congress of their constitutional authority to decide whether, when, and how to close down an agency” authorised by Congress.1The cuts were initiated by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) which is headed by billionaire Elon Musk, adviser to President Donald Trump. Around 1600 of USAID’s US employees were fired and most of the rest were placed on administrative leave. USAID had about 13 000...
Categories: Medical Journal News

The resident physicians losing out after private firms took over their hospitals

BMJ - British Medical Journal - Fri, 2025-03-21 03:46
Liz Calhoun was halfway through her three year emergency physician training when she learnt from a text message that her hospital was closing in three months. She and the other 571 resident physicians at Hahnemann University Hospital in Philadelphia did not know how or where they would finish their training. In the end they didn’t have three months to figure it out: the training programme closed 30 days later.Hahnemann, located in the heart of the city, was a “safety net” hospital, meaning that its staff provided care to patients regardless of their insurance status or ability to pay. At the time of its closure in 2019, Hahnemann made headlines as the model for what can go wrong when a profit driven private equity firm takes over a hospital. In the years since, several other hospitals bought by private equity firms have abruptly closed, leaving their communities’ health, economies, and resident...
Categories: Medical Journal News

A Randomized Trial of Automated Insulin Delivery in Type 2 Diabetes

NEJM Current Issue - Tue, 2025-03-18 18:40
New England Journal of Medicine, Ahead of Print.
Categories: Medical Journal News

[Comment] Substantial health threats from polluting household fuels

Lancet - Tue, 2025-03-18 16:30
Traditional solid fuels, such as coal and biomass, continue to be widely used to meet daily cooking energy needs, with particularly widespread consumption persisting in many low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs).1 Incomplete burning of these solid fuels yields various hazardous particles that pollute ambient and indoor air.2 Prolonged indoor exposure to household air pollution (HAP) substantially elevates the risk of developing severe respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, such as lung cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and ischaemic heart disease.
Categories: Medical Journal News
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