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Contents: November 2004

Front cover (large)

Contents page (PDF)

Editorials

Human cloning: ethical considerations
The debate surrounding therapeutic cloning has intensified since the granting of the first UK license for its study in August this year. Jez Fabes and Francesca Mazzola outline some of the main ethical questions

Publishing tobacco tar measurements on packets
Figures for tar, nicotine, and carbon monoxide are misleading and should be removed from the packaging of tobacco products, say Nigel Gray and Peter Boyle

News

Can country music drive you to suicide?

Students and teachers prefer early experience

Infectious diseases increase in Iraq as public health service deteriorates

Medics worldwide: news and opportunities from the IFMSA

Medical schools teach with humiliation and disrespect

Prisoners held under England's antiterrorism act face psychological damage

Education

Egos, trials, and nobel prizes
In light of the recent polio vaccination campaign in Africa, Christian Schopflin takes a look at the origins of the vaccine

Beginner's guide to genetics: Sex and genetics
In the third part of our series, Adrián J González and colleagues explain the genetic bases of sexual development

Clinical exam skills: Hand signs
In the third part of our series about clinical exam skills, Ian Bickle takes you through typical questions about hand signs

Essential Haematology
Stephen French and Arun Kochhar explain how to interpret blood results

Picture quiz: Abdominal mass

Tips on... How to spot a skull fracture

Picture quiz: Puzzle: Alcoholism

Science bites


Careers

Understanding personality type: Extraversion and introversion
In the second article in our series, Anita Houghton asks you to consider where you focus your attention--inside or out

Shift work and doctors' health
Thanks to new European legislation on working hours, more doctors will have to work unpopular shift systems. John Hobson spells out how shift work can affect your health and performance, and what you can do to protect yourself

Surgical dress code - according to Sir Lancelot Spratt
Luke Cascarini turns to the greatest surgeon of them all for some (spoof) sartorial advice

Epidemiologists are not skin specialists
Dharam J Kumbhani explains how studying epidemiology has influenced his clinical practice

15 minute interview: All the president's men

The advice zone


Papers

Paper plus: How does your dog smell? Olfactory detection of human bladder cancer
Leanne Tite takes you through a proof of principle study about whether dogs can detect bladder cancer through the smell of human urine

Life

WHO are you?
An internship at the World Health Organization might conjure up different images--a glamorous way of enhancing your CV and networking or boring bureaucratic office work. Darshan Sudarshi explains

Could animal activists affect your research?
Plans to give UK police more power when dealing with animal rights activists have been well publicised recently, together with pharmaceutical companies taking their research and animal tests elsewhere to avoid huge security costs. But how much is the activity of animal activists affecting researching doctors? Ruwanee Haris finds out

Access for all
Doctors in the United Kingdom have traditionally come from the wealthy privately educated backgrounds. Lindsay Banham and Rachel Kemp are involved in a project to expand intake from lower socioeconomic groups

Hostage
You may think an article about how to survive if you are taken hostage is a bit far fetched for the studentBMJ, but medical students do either study in countries where their status puts them at risk or may want to work with a non-governmental organisation. Ian Palmer gives some advice

Emergency: America
US medical student Oveys Mansuri has been fortunate enough to train in a newly refurbished emergency department. So, too, have Nigerian students, Chibuzo Odigwe and Seye Abimbola. Their situations are, however, quite different

The Nigerian emergency department

Want to know whats going on for medical students?


Letters

Health and human rights: not so simple

Human rights are hierarchial

Doctors' have a duty to protect human rights

Medical schools should not select using race

Or should they?

Stupid white men

Understanding the brain drain

Film can change attitudes

Reviews

World Press Photo

Electives in the United States and Canada

Revision MCQs

Positive discrimination favours no one

Self sacrifice only benefits the patients short term

Eyespy