141 results match your criteria: "Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.[Affiliation]"

Peer review is the cornerstone of academic publishing that upholds the quality and integrity of scholarly work. However, there is an ever-growing struggle to recruit peer reviewers, termed the 'peer review crisis', driven by a shrinking academic workforce and increased workload. Additionally, there is a notable lack of standardised training for peer reviewers which poses a challenge in maintaining high-quality reviews.

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Article Synopsis
  • The concept of neurodiversity is complex and has many definitions, which can confuse those wanting to learn about it.
  • A collaborative reading list created by neurodiverse researchers addresses the lack of curated information by covering nine key themes related to neurodiversity.
  • The resource aims to enhance understanding of neurodiversity and guide researchers toward more inclusive and rigorous scientific practices.
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Background: The the current views of less-than full-time (LTFT) training by both LTFT and full-time (FT) doctors in training, with regards to health and well-being, clinical and non-clinical opportunities, in addition to associated future workforce implications and challenges, are uncertain.

Methods: We performed a cross-sectional study of UK-based doctors in training via an online questionnaire, designed and piloted by the Royal College of Physicians Edinburgh (RCPE) Trainees and Members Committee. Design was informed by prior investigation into LTFT training undertaken amongst similar populations by RCPE in 2019.

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Atherosclerosis, a multifaceted pathogenic process affecting the arteries and aorta, poses a significant threat because of its potential to impede or entirely obstruct blood flow by narrowing blood vessels. This intricate progression involves various factors such as dyslipidemia, immunological responses, inflammation, and endothelial dysfunction. The initial phase manifests as the formation of fatty streaks, considered a pivotal hallmark in the inception of atherosclerotic plaques, a process that can commence as early as childhood.

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​​​​Behçet disease (BD) is a recurrent, multisystemic autoimmune vasculitis that affects both small and large vessels. A combination of neurological signs and symptoms in BD is called neuro-Behçet syndrome (NBS). We present the case of a 31-year-old male diagnosed with chronic progressive NBS who presented with multiple relapsing episodes concurrent with infective endocarditis due to intravenous drug abuse, drug-induced hepatitis, acute kidney injury, and septic shock that is not related to BD.

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Angry scientists, angry analysts and angry novelists.

Diabetologia

August 2023

Department of Population Medicine, College of Medicine, QU Health, Qatar University, Doha, Qatar.

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Worldwide, alcohol causes a death every 10 seconds. The harmful effects are much wider in terms of impaired health and wellbeing of those affected and their families, particularly the most disadvantaged. The wider societal impact and financial costs are huge.

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Importance: COVID-19 has highlighted widespread chronic underinvestment in digital health that hampered public health responses to the pandemic. Recognizing this, the Riyadh Declaration on Digital Health, formulated by an international interdisciplinary team of medical, academic, and industry experts at the Riyadh Global Digital Health Summit in August 2020, provided a set of digital health recommendations for the global health community to address the challenges of current and future pandemics. However, guidance is needed on how to implement these recommendations in practice.

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This is the second of two papers which examine a series of portraits of patients at the Royal Edinburgh Asylum (REA) which were undertaken in the 1880s by John Miles, who, as well as being a professional painter, was also an inmate of the Morningside institution. Alongside the portraits by Miles, we began, in Paper 1, to discuss a second series of portraits of the same patients, contained in a collection, entitled Bruised Reeds. In this paper we focus on the remaining portraits in this collection, before discussing the wider implications of the two series of portraits.

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parkrun - more than a run in the park.

J R Coll Physicians Edinb

September 2021

Research and Projects Officer, Scottish Health Action on Alcohol Problems (SHAAP), Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh (RCPE), 12 Queen Street, Edinburgh, EH2 1JQ, UK, Email:

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This is the first of two papers which examine a series of portraits of patients at the Royal Edinburgh Asylum (REA) which were undertaken in the 1880s by John Miles, who, as well as being a professional painter, was also an inmate of the Morningside institution. The portraits by John Miles are of interest for several reasons. They are an example of patient art, only a small portion of which has survived from nineteenth century asylums.

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The entire College, notably officers and staff, responded with resilience and versatility to COVID-19. We strove to remain at the forefront of medical education during rapid change in both medical care and the scientific evidence that supports it. Every department has had to adapt, indeed evolve, to tackle the pandemic, which affected all aspects of College work, notably education, training, examinations, heritage, policy and public affairs.

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