Latest news – Page 2680

  • News

    WEB WATCH

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    If you are reading this to pass the time while queueing outside your local Roxy, then the chances are you already know that today sees the UK cinema debut of The Phantom Menace , part one in George Lucas' Star Wars epic, which so creatively began with parts four to ...

  • News

    It shouldn't be you

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    The Lottery is bad for our health, hitting poorer communities hardest, and NHS managers should boycott it, writes Donald Coid

  • News

    Counsel homes

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Housebound patients offered home-based counselling services by a primary care team have reduced their need for other services. Paul Gurney explains

  • News

    A world of experience

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    NHS managers who break their careers to work abroad benefit enormously but may experience problems on their return - and find that employers are less enthusiastic. Barbara Millar reports

  • News

    In person

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Jonathan Parry is the new chief executive of Southport and Ormskirk Hospital trust, formed by a merger of West Lancashire trust and Southport and Formby Community Health Services trust, which he used to lead.

  • News

    Events

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Personal medical services

  • News

    Monitor

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    It is week two of the Save Bart's Apostrophe Campaign, and already at least one message of support has poured in. As you may recall, having taken the Royal out of London and the Saint out of Bartholomew, the trust has now re-fashioned itself Barts (sic) and the London trust. ...

  • News

    GADFLY

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    As the merger gathers pace, Tarantino is out for Rosie Broomstick's blood. And what on earth is a community health council?

  • News

    The economics of truth

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    PRESSURE POINT

  • News

    In Brief: Screening for ovarian cancer may increasese

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Screening for ovarian cancer may increasese, according to a pilot feasibility study. The study randomised more than 20,000 postmenopausal women aged over 45 into a screening and a control group. Those screened were offered annual measurements of the cancer antigen, Ca125, and ovarian ultrasonography. The study found that screening identified ...

  • News

    In Brief: US urologists devise way to predict risk of recurrence of prostate cancer

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    US urologists have devised a way of predicting the risk of a recurrence of prostate cancer after a radical prostatectomy. Using a study sample of 1,997 men who had had a radical prostatectomy for localised prostate cancer, the urologists studied the time it took for the concentration of prostate-specific antigen ...

  • News

    In Brief: Group to produce a map of genetic markers

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    A group, including pharmaceutical companies, academic centres and the Wellcome Trust has launched a two-year initiative to create a map of genetic markers which will be available without charge. The SNP Consortium will seek to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms involved in disease processes so that safer and more effective drugs ...

  • News

    Study urges oxygen booster

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Optimising oxygen delivery to the tissues in patients about to undergo major elective surgery would be a significant and cost-effective improvement in perioperative care, a study in the British Medical Journal (24 April, page 1099) has revealed.

  • News

    Cutting deaths from head injury

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    A major international trial has been launched to determine whether the delivery of corticosteroids shortly after head injury can reduce deaths and disability after accidents.

  • News

    Sugar refiner

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    A landmark study shows that the life-threatening complications of the most common form of diabetes can be substantially reduced by more intensive management of existing treatments. But what are the cost and service implications for the NHS? Rhonda Siddall

  • News

    Hard graft

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Patients with end-stage renal failure may be overjoyed to receive a donor kidney - but it is only the start of the battle to prevent rejection and keep the patient well. Jenny Bryan looks at drug treatments that can help

  • News

    Reverting to type

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    In time, patients' genetic profiles may be checked to ensure new treatments go to those who will benefit most, writes Jenny Bryan

  • News

    Into the unknown

    1999-07-15T00:00:00Z

    More input from patients and more openness from drug companies could go some way towards negotiating the practical and ethical problems of clinical trials, writes Geoff Watts