car Mark Ricketts | A nation with a capacity for caring, but much more is needed By jamaica-gleaner.com Published On :: Sun, 22 Mar 2020 00:25:29 -0500 The global pandemic is real, with almost 8,000 deaths worldwide and nearly 200,000 persons having contracted the virus in 155 affected countries. What is particularly comforting for this country, amid pain and the not knowing, is the bedside and... Full Article
car Lacey-Ann Bartley: carving her name in business By jamaica-gleaner.com Published On :: Mon, 09 Mar 2020 00:11:25 -0500 From formalising her father’s business and taking it to higher and more profitable heights to sitting on the board of EXIM Bank and lecturing in the field of business development, Lacey-Ann Bartley has earned her stripes as the Distinguished Woman... Full Article
car Vox Pop: Coping with college and career in quarantine By jamaica-gleaner.com Published On :: Mon, 20 Apr 2020 00:14:28 -0500 It is definitely a make-or-break season for those trying to balance career and COVID-19 at home. For some, it is the ideal time to reconnect with themselves, family members and get creative with work. While with others, the cookie crumbles and they... Full Article
car Now healthy, Karns looks to revive career By mlb.mlb.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Feb 2019 14:14:42 EDT Everyone hopes for health this early in spring. But few more than Nate Karns, who has trudged a longer road back than any player in Orioles camp. Full Article
car COVID-19 crippling Caribbean football – McNab By jamaica-gleaner.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 00:05:46 -0500 FORMER NATIONAL footballer Aldrick ‘Allie’ McNab is concerned about the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the Caribbean’s football development. The coronavirus has caused the postponement, suspension, and cancellation of a number of sporting... Full Article
car Managing multimorbidity in primary care By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 23 Jan 2015 11:56:24 +0000 Multimorbidity presents a number of different challenges, for the patients living with the conditions, but also for the health professionals caring for them in systems that often are not designed with these more complex needs in mind. Emma Wallace, general practice lecturer, and Susan Smith, a professor of general practice at the Royal College of... Full Article
car Patient spotlight - How can we get better at providing patient centred care? By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Tue, 10 Feb 2015 12:04:46 +0000 Participants in our discussion on person centred care in January agreed that a change in culture and better use of technology could benefit both patients and doctors. At the roundtable: Fiona Godlee (chair), editor in chief, The BMJ Tessa Richards, senior editor, patient partnership, The BMJ Rosamund Snow, patient editor, The BMJ Navjoyt Ladher,... Full Article
car Mark Folman GP - time pressure and patient care By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 13 Feb 2015 16:17:24 +0000 Mark Folman, a GP in Nottinghamshire, is concerned that more and more work, with more and more patients, means less time with those who really need him. BMJ Voices is a collection of readers’ experiences of working in the NHS. For this, The BMJ is seeking short audio submissions from UK listeners. These submissions will be published on... Full Article
car What it's like to receive cardiac rehabilitation By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Sat, 26 Sep 2015 14:09:05 +0000 With improved survival and and ageing population, the number of people living with coronary heart disease in the UK has increased to an estimated 2.3 million. There is increasing evidence that cardiac rehabilitation benefits these patients, and as such it has been included in international clinical guidelines. In this podcast, we're joined by... Full Article
car This house believes that medicine is the best career in the world. By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Mon, 02 Nov 2015 12:36:55 +0000 Medicine has long been a rewarding career, but doctors say the profession needs to overcome the frustrations of working in the NHS to ensure it remains so. During the Big Debate at BMJ Live in London last week six speakers argued for and against the motion, “This house believes that medicine is the best career in the world.” After presentations... Full Article
car Diagnosing COPD in primary care By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 04 Dec 2015 10:04:39 +0000 Francesca Conway, from the Department of Primary Care and Public Health at Imperial College London is co-author of an article on diagnosis of COPD. She joins us to discuss the major guideline recommendations, and highlights where they concur and where they differ. Read the full article: http://www.bmj.com/content/351/bmj.h6171 Full Article
car BMJ roundtable: How to fix out of hours care By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Wed, 27 Apr 2016 14:39:06 +0000 The BMJ recently held a discussion between experts in the fields of general practice, emergency medicine, and paediatrics about the state of out of hours care in the UK, and crucially offered their vision for a better service. Are children a special case, can urgent care ‘hubs’ be a silver bullet, is NHS 111 up to the job of triaging patients,... Full Article
car Caring for patients with delirium at the end of their life By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Tue, 14 Jun 2016 16:15:33 +0000 Delirium is common in the last weeks or days of life. It can be distressing for patients and those around them. A clinical update explains why successful management involves excluding reversible causes of delirium and balancing drugs that may provoke or maintain delirium while appreciating that most patients want to retain clear cognition at the... Full Article
car What went wrong with care.data? By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 22 Jul 2016 16:20:00 +0000 Failures in implementation of data sharing projects have eroded public trust. In the wake of NHS England’s decision to close down its care.data programme, Tjeerd-Pieter van Staa professor of health e-research at the University of Manchester, examines what lessons must be learnt, and what we can do better next time. Read the full... Full Article
car Reprehensible, but the people carrying out atrocities have very low rates of mental disorders By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Thu, 08 Sep 2016 14:46:46 +0000 Oversimplification and lack of evidence stigmatise people with mental illness and impede prevention efforts, says Simon Wessley, professor of psychiatry at King's College London, in an editorial published on thebmj.com. Read the full editorial: http://www.bmj.com/content/354/bmj.i4869 Full Article
car Margaret McCartney wants to fix the NHS By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Mon, 28 Nov 2016 17:15:18 +0000 Glasgow GP, writer, broadcaster, and The BMJ's weekly columnist Margaret McCartney joins us to talk about her new book "The State of Medicine: Keeping the Promise of the NHS". Read all of Margaret's columns: goo.gl/iKmmie Full Article
car Caring for renal transplant patients By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 02 Dec 2016 18:28:42 +0000 Renal transplantation improves quantity and quality of life compared with chronic dialysis. A UK general practice with 8000 patients will have around four patients with a functioning renal transplant, one patient on the transplant waiting list, and several under consideration for transplantation. Many medical problems in renal transplant... Full Article
car Palliative care is about life, not death By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 03 Mar 2017 17:04:51 +0000 Scott Murray, professor of primary palliative care at the University of Edinburgh, has written, and talked in this podcast before, about the benefits of early palliative care - and today he’s back to explain how illness trajectory, and the pattern of decline at the end of life, affects 4 main areas of wellness - physical, social, psychological and... Full Article
car Emergency care plans at the end of life By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Wed, 08 Mar 2017 16:48:04 +0000 When a person’s heart or breathing stops and the cause is reversible, immediate cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) offers a chance of life. However, when a person is dying—for example, from organ failure, frailty, or advanced cancer—and his or her heart stops as a final part of a dying process, CPR will not prevent death and may do harm. But... Full Article
car Education round up - HIV testing, legal highs and care for relatives of the dying By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 17 Mar 2017 15:44:23 +0000 The BMJ publishes a lot of educational articles, and in an attempt to help you with your CPD, we have put together this round-up. Our authors and editors will reflect on the key learning points in the articles we discuss, and explain how they may change their practice in light of that new understanding. In this week's round up we're... Full Article
car American healthcare - what next? By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Mar 2017 09:10:02 +0000 For seven years, Republicans have vowed to repeal the Affordable Healthcare Act (Obamacare), and that promise took a central place in President Trump's campaign. The first major vote to replace it was due to happen last week, but was cancelled at the 11th hour. In advance of the potential vote, The BMJ published a debate asking "Should US doctors... Full Article
car High integrity child mental healthcare By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Thu, 06 Apr 2017 14:54:29 +0000 Around 1 in 10 children and young people worldwide have mental health difficulties that substantially affect their lives. Child mental health services often concentrate on risk reduction, at the expense of the wider aspects of a child's wellbeing. As part of the high integrity healthcare series, this podcast focuses on novel ways of providing... Full Article
car Preventing Overdiagnosis 2017 - Stacy Carter on the culture of overmedicalisation By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Thu, 17 Aug 2017 18:17:17 +0000 In this interview from Preventing Overdiagnosis 2017 (preventingoverdiagnosis.net) Stacy Carter, associate professor at Sydney Health Ethics - and the author of a recently written BMJ essay the ethical aspects of overdiagnosis, joins us to talk about how the cultural context of medicine seeps into our decision making processes and affects how... Full Article
car The World Bank - Universal Healthcare By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 01 Sep 2017 09:01:34 +0000 The world bank was set up in 1944. In the aftermath of the second world war, the institution was there to give loans to countries rebuilding after the conflict. Their first loan went to France - but with stipulations about repayment that set a tone for future funds. A new series, authored by Devi Sridhar, and her team from the University of... Full Article
car They can't hear you - how hearing loss can affect care. By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 19 Jan 2018 12:31:52 +0000 Many older adults have difficulty understanding speech in acute healthcare settings owing to hearing loss, but the effect on patient care is often overlooked. Jan Blustein professor of health policy and medicine at New York University, and who has also experienced the affects of hearing loss, joins us to explain what that's like, and gives some... Full Article
car James Munro cares about patients opinions. By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Thu, 05 Jul 2018 16:00:39 +0000 Getting feedback from people who use NHS services is essential to assessing their value - and improving their quality. Hospitals and general practices widely post information about patient's satisfaction with their services on their websites, but approach tells us little about how feedback changes things on the ground . In this podcast, James... Full Article
car Talking honestly about intensive care By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 26 Oct 2018 19:35:20 +0000 On the podcast, we’ve talked a lot about the limits of medicine - where treatment doesn’t work, or potentially harms. But in that conversation, we’ve mainly focused on specific treatments. Now a new analysis, broadens that to talk about patients being admitted to a whole ward - intensive care. The authors of that article contend that, often,... Full Article
car Carers need a voice in the NHS By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Thu, 22 Nov 2018 17:05:00 +0000 Until recently, The BMJ had a campaign of patient partnership - now we have a patient and public partnership campaign. The reason for that change is that medicine has an effect beyond the individual being treated - and this podcast interview is a very good example of that. Anya De Iong, patient editor for The BMJ, talks to Christine Morgan -... Full Article
car Goran Henriks - How an 80 year old woman called Esther shaped Swedish Healthcare By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 25 Jan 2019 06:11:19 +0000 Jönköping has been at the centre of the healthcare quality improvement movement for years - but how did a forested region of Sweden, situated between it's main cities, come to embrace the philosophy of improvement so fervently? Goran Henriks, chief executive of learning and innovation at Qulturum in Jönköping joins us to explain. He also tells... Full Article
car Nuffield 2019 - How can the NHS provide a fulfilling lifelong career By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Mar 2019 18:23:54 +0000 More doctors are choosing to retire early, doctors who take career breaks find it hard to return to practice, and doctors at all stages of their careers are frustrated by the lack of support given to training and development in today’s NHS. Each year the BMJ holds a roundtable discussion at the Nuffield Summit - where health leaders come... Full Article
car Climate change will make universal health coverage precarious By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Tue, 24 Sep 2019 14:26:52 +0000 The BMJ in partnership with The Harvard Global Health Institute has launched a collection of articles exploring how to achieve effective universal health coverage (UHC). The collection highlights the importance of quality in UHC, potential finance models, how best to incentivise stakeholders, and some of the barriers to true UHC. One of those... Full Article
car Behind the campaign promises - Health and social care spending By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 22 Nov 2019 16:21:30 +0000 A UK general election has been called - polling day is on the 12th of December, and from now until then we’re going to be bringing you a weekly election-themed podcast. We want to help you make sense of the promises and pledges, claims and counter-claims, that are being made around healthcare and the NHS out on the campaign trail. This week... Full Article
car Front line stories - How corona is changing acute care By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Tue, 14 Apr 2020 22:33:14 +0000 As we cover the covid-19 outbreak, we want to hear some of the stories from the frontline - And who better to heart of what this pandemic is doing to the profession in the UK, than some of the people who write regularly for The BMJ? In this first one, we wanted to look specifically at acute care - those at the sharp end of the response, so we're... Full Article
car Wellbeing - some advice for telehealth in secondary care By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 18:30:00 +0000 We’ve published info on Telehealth in primary care - and have been overwhelmed by the response from GPs who are finding it useful. But it’s not only primary care that is dramatically shifting to remote care - routine hospital care is moving online too, so we’ve asked Rowena McCash - GP and out of hours triage trainer joins us to give some tips... Full Article
car Talk Evidence - Remdesivir, care homes, and death data By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Fri, 17 Apr 2020 15:00:49 +0000 For the next few months Talk Evidence is going to focus on the new corona virus pandemic. There is an enormous amount of uncertainty about the disease, what the symptoms are, fatality rate, treatment options, things we shouldn't be doing. We're going to try to get away from the headlines and talk about what we need to know - to hopefully give... Full Article
car Frontline stories - caring for non-covid patients By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 19:32:52 +0000 As the pandemic plays out - hospitals are reconfigured to increase critical care capacity, outpatient clinics become virtual, and elective procedures delayed. How are these affecting care for those who are in hospital but don't have covid-19? In this podcast, Matt Morgan,honorary senior research fellow at Cardiff University, consultant in... Full Article
car Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease: The "Common Soil" Hypothesis By diabetes.diabetesjournals.org Published On :: 1995-04-01 Michael P SternApr 1, 1995; 44:369-374Perspectives in Diabetes Full Article
car Clinical and Molecular Prevalence of Lipodystrophy in an Unascertained Large Clinical Care Cohort By diabetes.diabetesjournals.org Published On :: 2020-01-20T12:00:26-08:00 Lipodystrophies are a group of disorders characterized by absence or loss of adipose tissue and abnormal fat distribution, commonly accompanied by metabolic dysregulation. Although considered rare disorders, their prevalence in the general population is not well understood. We aimed to evaluate the clinical and genetic prevalence of lipodystrophy disorders in a large clinical care cohort. We interrogated the electronic health record (EHR) information of >1.3 million adults from the Geisinger Health System for lipodystrophy diagnostic codes. We estimate a clinical prevalence of disease of 1 in 20,000 individuals. We performed genetic analyses in individuals with available genomic data to identify variants associated with inherited lipodystrophies and examined their EHR for comorbidities associated with lipodystrophy. We identified 16 individuals carrying the p.R482Q pathogenic variant in LMNA associated with Dunnigan familial partial lipodystrophy. Four had a clinical diagnosis of lipodystrophy, whereas the remaining had no documented clinical diagnosis despite having accompanying metabolic abnormalities. We observed a lipodystrophy-associated variant carrier frequency of 1 in 3,082 individuals in our cohort with substantial burden of metabolic dysregulation. We estimate a genetic prevalence of disease of ~1 in 7,000 in the general population. Partial lipodystrophy is an underdiagnosed condition. and its prevalence, as defined molecularly, is higher than previously reported. Genetically guided stratification of patients with common metabolic disorders, like diabetes and dyslipidemia, is an important step toward precision medicine. Full Article
car PPARA Polymorphism Influences the Cardiovascular Benefit of Fenofibrate in Type 2 Diabetes: Findings From ACCORD-Lipid By diabetes.diabetesjournals.org Published On :: 2020-03-20T11:50:29-07:00 The cardiovascular benefits of fibrates have been shown to be heterogeneous and to depend on the presence of atherogenic dyslipidemia. We investigated whether genetic variability in the PPARA gene, coding for the pharmacological target of fibrates (PPAR-α), could be used to improve the selection of patients with type 2 diabetes who may derive cardiovascular benefit from addition of this treatment to statins. We identified a common variant at the PPARA locus (rs6008845, C/T) displaying a study-wide significant influence on the effect of fenofibrate on major cardiovascular events (MACE) among 3,065 self-reported white subjects treated with simvastatin and randomized to fenofibrate or placebo in the ACCORD-Lipid trial. T/T homozygotes (36% of participants) experienced a 51% MACE reduction in response to fenofibrate (hazard ratio 0.49; 95% CI 0.34–0.72), whereas no benefit was observed for other genotypes (Pinteraction = 3.7 x 10–4). The rs6008845-by-fenofibrate interaction on MACE was replicated in African Americans from ACCORD (N = 585, P = 0.02) and in external cohorts (ACCORD-BP, ORIGIN, and TRIUMPH, total N = 3059, P = 0.005). Remarkably, rs6008845 T/T homozygotes experienced a cardiovascular benefit from fibrate even in the absence of atherogenic dyslipidemia. Among these individuals, but not among carriers of other genotypes, fenofibrate treatment was associated with lower circulating levels of CCL11—a proinflammatory and atherogenic chemokine also known as eotaxin (P for rs6008845-by-fenofibrate interaction = 0.003). The GTEx data set revealed regulatory functions of rs6008845 on PPARA expression in many tissues. In summary, we have found a common PPARA regulatory variant that influences the cardiovascular effects of fenofibrate and that could be used to identify patients with type 2 diabetes who would derive benefit from fenofibrate treatment, in addition to those with atherogenic dyslipidemia. Full Article
car Downswell reaches out to Central Village - Carry Me singer delivers care packages to community By jamaica-gleaner.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 00:05:37 -0500 The wet weather last Saturday (May 2) could not dampen the spirits of award-winning gospel artiste and ordained evangelist Kevin Downswell as he ventured into the St Catherine community of Central Village, where he spent some of his formative years... Full Article
car Care cash rush By jamaica-gleaner.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 00:16:14 -0500 Scores of people who turned up yesterday at the Pavilion Mall to collect their government-issued compassionate grants at Western Union made a mockery of physical distancing as they converge on the financial institution. There were long lines... Full Article
car World Bank predicts sharpest decline of remittances to Caribbean By jamaica-gleaner.com Published On :: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 15:26:53 -0500 WASHINGTON, CMC – The World Bank has predicted the sharpest decline of remittances to Latin America and the Caribbean, saying that global remittances on a whole are projected to fall by about 20 percent in 2020 due to the economic crisis... Full Article
car CARPHA urges public to guard against mosquito-borne diseases By jamaica-gleaner.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 10:16:34 -0500 PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad, CMC – The Trinidad-based Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA) is urging people in the region to remember that despite the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, they must be mindful that other public health threats still... Full Article
car Dentists could help detect diabetes and cardiovascular disease during oral health checks By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Thursday, April 25, 2019 - 05:31 Full Article
car Progress in diabetes care has not improved outcomes in US, study finds By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Thursday, August 15, 2019 - 13:11 Full Article
car Partha Kar: What will the 2020s hold for diabetes care? By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Tuesday, January 21, 2020 - 14:51 Full Article
car Top 10 moments in Frank Robinson's career By mlb.mlb.com Published On :: Thu, 7 Feb 2019 16:09:25 EDT Few figures in baseball history have accomplished as much as Frank Robinson. A feared slugger, a World Series champion, a pioneer for minority managers and an ambassador for the game, Robinson had an impact that can be felt in all corners of the sport. Full Article
car Bariatric Surgery Rapidly Decreases Cardiac Dietary Fatty Acid Partitioning and Hepatic Insulin Resistance Through Increased Intra-abdominal Adipose Tissue Storage and Reduced Spillover in Type 2 Diabetes By diabetes.diabetesjournals.org Published On :: 2020-03-20T11:50:28-07:00 Reduced storage of dietary fatty acids (DFAs) in abdominal adipose tissues with enhanced cardiac partitioning has been shown in subjects with type 2 diabetes (T2D) and prediabetes. We measured DFA metabolism and organ partitioning using positron emission tomography with oral and intravenous long-chain fatty acid and glucose tracers during a standard liquid meal in 12 obese subjects with T2D before and 8–12 days after bariatric surgery (sleeve gastrectomy or sleeve gastrectomy and biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch). Bariatric surgery reduced cardiac DFA uptake from a median (standard uptake value [SUV]) 1.75 (interquartile range 1.39–2.57) before to 1.09 (1.04–1.53) after surgery (P = 0.01) and systemic DFA spillover from 56.7 mmol before to 24.7 mmol over 6 h after meal intake after surgery (P = 0.01), with a significant increase in intra-abdominal adipose tissue DFA uptake from 0.15 (0.04–0.31] before to 0.49 (0.20–0.59) SUV after surgery (P = 0.008). Hepatic insulin resistance was significantly reduced in close association with increased DFA storage in intra-abdominal adipose tissues (r = –0.79, P = 0.05) and reduced DFA spillover (r = 0.76, P = 0.01). We conclude that bariatric surgery in subjects with T2D rapidly reduces cardiac DFA partitioning and hepatic insulin resistance at least in part through increased intra-abdominal DFA storage and reduced spillover. Full Article
car Cartels and Competition in Minerals Markets: Challenges for Global Governance By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 16:13:30 +0000 19 December 2014 This research paper sets out recommendations for enhanced dialogue and intensified international cooperation that could significantly improve the functioning of global mineral markets. Download PDF Felix Preston Former Senior Research Fellow and Deputy Research Director, Energy, Environment and Resources Siân Bradley Research Fellow, Energy, Environment and Resources Programme @ChathamSian Jaakko Kooroshy Former Chatham House Expert 20141219CartelsMineralsKooroshyPrestonBradley.jpg Photo: iStockphoto.com/tunart The purpose of this research paper is to identify and analyse the key policy challenges associated with anti-competitive practices in international metals and minerals markets.RecommendationsEnhanced dialogue and intensified international cooperation in four areas could significantly improve the functioning of global mineral markets:Deal with the last remnants of producer-country cartels Consumer countries should make a publicly visible case that in an age of interdependence and global supply chains, any remaining forms of producer-country cartels are an anachronism. Given limited means to coerce governments to stop supporting the last remaining mineral cartels in potash, a ‘naming and shaming’ approach in key forums such as the Group of Twenty (G20) and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) is likely to be most effective. Such action could be initiated by the three largest potash importers China, India and Brazil, and should seek support from others such as the EU and Japan. Prevent damaging export restrictions through win-win arrangementsWTO litigation against export restrictions is unlikely to be a silver bullet and in the short term cooperative policy dialogues, such as those pursued by the OECD, offer the best prospects for concrete results. Such dialogues should also be initiated by major emerging economies and could focus on providing incentives such as investment packages or technology-sharing to entice producer countries to abstain from imposing restrictions. Consumers should continue to push for more specific and stricter WTO rules on export restrictions. Japan, the EU and the US should seek to include similar measures in regional trade negotiations. Strengthen cooperation among regulators on clandestine private cartels and other anti-competitive practices Concerted action will be required by governments to tackle anti-competitive practices such as clandestine cartels, price-fixing and territorial agreements. Key regulators, such as those in the EU and China, should expand collection and sharing of data and best practice on anti-trust enforcement in minerals markets. In key cases they could also coordinate prosecution. Sustained investment in institutional capacity is required in many emerging economies; this should be supported through bilateral cooperation and via regional forums. Governments should also resuscitate the stalled negotiations on the WTO’s role in competition policy. Enhance governance for transnational market platforms and pricing mechanismsThe responsibility to regulate key nodes in global minerals markets will remain in the hands of national bodies, but coordination is vital given interconnected global markets. International organizations and regulators should strengthen structural cooperation and exchange in the area of physical markets and with greater involvement of emerging economies. An informal high-level forum on regulating physical markets could reinvigorate debate, foster new perspectives and stimulate new partnerships. Governments in key consumer countries should also give their national regulators a clear mandate in minerals markets. Department/project Energy, Environment and Resources Programme Full Article
car Myocardial Blood Flow and Myocardial Flow Reserve After Cardiac Transplantation: Mistakes in Diagnostic Value and Prognosis By jnm.snmjournals.org Published On :: 2020-04-01T06:00:28-07:00 Full Article