British experts aim for truth in medicine and health
Governments should receive funding and the threat of global terrorism in perspective, given the number of preventable deaths that occur each day with HIV, malaria and tuberculosis. The inconvenient truth and others are part of a series this month Journal Royal Society of Medicine published. The editorials of leading scientists and doctors are concerned with issues of health and medicine in the United Kingdom. Of compassion in health care, the NHS leaving for private practice, the articles and the informal discussion of current events to stimulate, but said the problems.Dr. John Main says doctors in the United Kingdom should stop complaining and get some perspective, while a university professor of General Medicine urged doctors to spend more time with their patients.
Academic Medical University of Keele need to learn to write legibly and a further act of kindness a day by medical staff should remain in the hospital better and easier for patients and more rewarding for workers, says Dr. Phil Hadridge. But there is some humanity left the National Health Service Dr Sophie Petit-Zeman questions from the Association of Medical Research Charities.JRSM editor, Kamran Abbasi asks readers to rethink their faith in this season. Al Gores inconvenient truths of the year, said Dr. Abbasi, and there are many in medicine and health. Why not health care professionals for more compassion? Why doctors can not stop complaining? Why can not people more inquiries? These questions can not be resolved or become so annoying that we have stopped talking about
it? We need to talk about what is really important for patients to restart.---------------------------- Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. ---------------------------- Inconvenient Truths series was released in December 2006 (Vol 99) by the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. JRSM is the flagship journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. It has been published continuously since
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