I worked as a rheumatologist for over thirty years without ever doing an exam in rheumatology - as did we all in 1975. The UK public have always...
I get the impression that this paper is a bit like a family of stick insects that decided to go for a walk where a group of chameleons had decided...
Suggests that aerobics is useless but I doubt one can conclude anything since it is unblinded.
This looks like serious disinformation from a certain Dr Jennifer Curtin, associated with Kaufman and Chheda?
I had a quick look. I cannot see how one can really draw any conclusions without any control data. Goodness knows what caused what here.
Simon Wessely might well have something to do with this I guess. The mental health benefits of working in the NHS are so great that everyone is...
We need a deeper understanding because the ideas Iwasaki and Putrino are suggesting are just what anyone could have made up from the start and...
Yes, that is how I understood it.
In a way yes. I was looking for a metaphor for something that seemed to be useful but at some point imperceptibly became an invisible appendage....
You can get to the bottom of the pocket but there is still some fabric beyond the stitching. I admit that this is a feeble modern example of only...
Autoimmunity is not generally a risk factor for problems with vaccines as far as I am aware. This article appeared in an obscure journal and may...
In years gone by the extra bits were often double and unfinished, especially if covered by a lining.
It seems more likely that the right idea has simply not been put forward yet. The ideas put forward so far are mostly repetition the established...
It is sad, but not unexpected, to see the lack of anything actually discovered in this article. It is a bit like a report on a collection of...
It reminds me of that extra bit of material attached to a jeans pocket below the stitching that carries on just as two flaps of material going...
Actually we do have this in the UK. It is the MRC. To be fair they did just this. Eleanor Riley was charged with asking experts what research was...
It is a puzzling finding but without knowing how the levels found normally relate to exertion or other 'stress' it is hard to know what to make of...
The findings may be the beginning of something important but I think we should not lose sight of just how different it would be for a patient to...
Is it possible that the changes in controls are due to activities that are normally associated with a pleasurable sense of having done a nice bike...
Ah but it says (something like):
Separate names with a comma.