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http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.q2084 | DOI Listing |
Front Public Health
January 2025
Faculty of Health and Society, Department of Care Science, Malmö University, Malmö, Sweden.
Aim: To identify existing public knowledge regarding diabetes and diabetes-related services offered to persons living with diabetes in the City of Malmö.
Methods: A literature review of City of Malmö's website, public statistics, School health documentation, job databases, education programs, local newspaper, Swedish National Diabetes Register, and was performed in 2020.
Results: We identified political decisions about diabetes nurses in home care, financing a project about diabetes complications, and funding support in schools for designated children.
BMJ Oncol
March 2024
Institute for Global Health, University College London, London, UK.
The Iraqi population has lived under four decades of conflicts, warfare and political instability. The health consequences of the protracted conflict continue to persist. This work critically analyses Iraq's barriers to delivering and accessing cancer care during the conflicts that Iraq passed through from 1980 to 2017.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Oncol
August 2024
Department of Surgery & Cancer, Hammersmith Hospital, London, UK.
Objectives: The UK's withdrawal from the European Union (a political movement known as 'Brexit') incited concern both in the public and private sector about the future of drug development and the clinical trial landscape in the UK. This study evaluates trends in the initiation of phase III clinical trials that evaluated systemic anticancer treatments from 2010 to 2022 both in the UK and worldwide.
Methods And Analysis: Relevant clinical trials were identified through ClinicalTrials.
J Law Med Ethics
January 2025
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, NEW YORK, NY, USA.
Bioethics is taking an institutional turn, where organizations are being taken seriously as moral agents. Within US healthcare, this is difficult to do without confronting "the market" as a highly influential context for organizational behavior. In the 1990s, pioneering thinkers such as David Mechanic, Brad Gray, and Mark Schlesinger undertook a first round of organizational ethics scholarship focused on how market forces influence health insurer behavior - motivated by a particular concern for health maintenance organizations (HMOs).
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