Gunslingers gait
A lot of attention has been paid to Russian president Vladimir Putin recently, but a group of researchers from The Netherlands are more interested in his walk than his intervention in Syria. Bastiaan Bloem, medical director of the Parkinson's Centre in Nijmegen, joins us to explain more. http://www.bmj.com/content/351/bmj.h6141 (Source: The BMJ Podcast)
Source: The BMJ Podcast - December 15, 2015 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ Group Source Type: podcasts

Nuffield summit - Bastiaan Bloem on parkinsons.net
Bastiaan Bloem, consultant neurologist at Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Netherlands, discussing his revolutionary approach to patient centred care. Read more from the summit:http://www.bmj.com/content/350/bmj.h1172 (Source: The BMJ Podcast)
Source: The BMJ Podcast - March 5, 2015 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ talk medicine Source Type: podcasts

Nuffield summit - Bastiaan Bloem on parkinsons.net
Bastiaan Bloem, consultant neurologist at Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Netherlands, discussing his revolutionary approach to patient centred care. Read more from the summit: http://www.bmj.com/content/350/bmj.h1172 (Source: The BMJ Podcast)
Source: The BMJ Podcast - March 5, 2015 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ talk medicine Source Type: podcasts

Nuffield summit - Bastiaan Bloem on parkinsons.net
Bastiaan Bloem, consultant neurologist at Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Netherlands, discussing his revolutionary approach to patient centred care. Read more from the summit: http://www.bmj.com/content/350/bmj.h1172 (Source: The BMJ Podcast)
Source: The BMJ Podcast - March 5, 2015 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ Group Source Type: podcasts

The diagnosis and management of Menieres disease
A clinical review on thebmj.com looks at Meniere’s disease. One of the review's authors, Jonny Harcourt, a consultant otologist at Charing Cross Hospital in London, takes us through the pathogenic process and clinical presentation of the disease, its clinical course and prognosis, and what clinical features help to discriminate the condition from other diagnoses. He also discusses the evidence for treatment. In a second interview Corine from The Netherlands discusses her experience of having the disease, and offers her tips to others with the condition. https://soundcloud.com/bmjpodcasts/menieres-disease-patient Read ...
Source: The BMJ Podcast - November 13, 2014 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ Group Source Type: podcasts

Menieres disease - a patient perspective
A clinical review on thebmj.com looks at Meniere's disease. Corine from The Netherlands discusses her experience of having the disease and explains how the symptoms of vertigo and tinnitus have affected her everyday life. She also offers her top tips on coping with the disease to others with the condition. In a second podcast, Jonny Harcourt, a consultant otologist at Charing Cross Hospital in London and one of the authors of the review, takes us through the clinical course and prognosis of the disease. https://soundcloud.com/bmjpodcasts/menieres-disease Read the full review: http://www.bmj.com/content/349/bmj.g6544 (So...
Source: The BMJ Podcast - November 13, 2014 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ Group Source Type: podcasts

Listen to patients, how Radboud UMC changed quality and care
In April 2006 one of the largest hospitals in the Netherlands hit the national headlines with the exposure of “scandalously” poor results for cardiac surgery. Melvin Samsom, CEO of the hospital, explains how the high death rates galvanised quality improvement and innovative change, transforming it into a model for patient participation. Read more about the transformation at: http://www.bmj.com/content/349/bmj.g5765 (Source: The BMJ Podcast)
Source: The BMJ Podcast - September 25, 2014 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ Group Source Type: podcasts

Anti vaccination movements
Paul Offit, the author of the yes side of our head to head article "Should childhood vaccination be mandatory", joins us to discuss his book Deadly Choices: How the anti-vaccine movement threatens us all, and explains why he thinks it is wrong to refuse to accept patients who haven't been vaccinated. Also, in the month when UK prime minister David Cameron said dementia care is a “national crisis” and that he is making it one of his personal priorities, Marcel Olde Rikkert, professor in geriatrics at Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre in the Netherlands, discusses his research which looks at the relative effecti...
Source: The BMJ Podcast - August 27, 2013 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ Group Source Type: podcasts

Acutely ill patients
It's increasingly obvious that acutely ill patients have received less than gold standard care. Deficiencies in training are often blamed. Paul Frost, consultant in intensive care medicine at the University Hospital of Wales, takes us through the admission of an acutely ill patient. Also this week, BRCA mutations and ionising radiation both increase the risk of developing cancer, but how do these risk factors combine? Anouk Pijpe, an epidemiologist at the Netherlands Cancer Institute, explains the results of her retrospective cohort study. (Source: The BMJ Podcast)
Source: The BMJ Podcast - August 27, 2013 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ Group Source Type: podcasts

Bias in clinical guidelines, and giving birth at home
Despite repeated calls to prohibit or limit conflicts of interests among authors and sponsors of clinical guidelines, the problem persists. Jeanne Lenzer explains what's going wrong. And is giving birth at home as safe for the mother as giving birth in hospital? New research from the Netherlands suggests that it is, and that risk assessment is key. (Source: The BMJ Podcast)
Source: The BMJ Podcast - August 5, 2013 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ talk medicine Source Type: podcasts

Bias in clinical guidelines, and giving birth at home
Despite repeated calls to prohibit or limit conflicts of interests among authors and sponsors of clinical guidelines, the problem persists. Jeanne Lenzer explains what's going wrong. And is giving birth at home as safe for the mother as giving birth in hospital? New research from the Netherlands suggests that it is, and that risk assessment is key. (Source: The BMJ Podcast)
Source: The BMJ Podcast - August 5, 2013 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ Group Source Type: podcasts

Oral evening primrose oil and borage oil for eczema (Dutch version)
Eczema is one of the commonest conditions of childhood, and, for many, it continues into their later lives. Increasingly, patients are turning to complementary or alternative therapies and a new Cochrane Review in April 2013 examines evening primrose oil and borage oil. Christel van Gool - de Vrede from Maastricht University in the Netherlands, describes the findings (in Dutch).This podcast also available in: read more (Source: Podcasts from The Cochrane Library)
Source: Podcasts from The Cochrane Library - April 30, 2013 Category: Journals (General) Authors: The Cochrane Collaboration Tags: Issues 4 to 6, April to June 2013 Source Type: podcasts

ASFH The Shifting Sands of Keratometry
Guest: Sverker Norrby, PhD Owner of Pulab; Consultancy in Ophthalmic Implants.  Groningen, Netherlands (Source: As Seen From Here)
Source: As Seen From Here - April 15, 2013 Category: Opthalmology Authors: JYoungMD at gmail.com Source Type: podcasts

ASFH Aspirin and AMD
Guest: P.T.V.M. de Jong, MD, PhD.Department of Ophthalmogenetics, Netherlands Ophthalmic Research InstituteRoyal Netherlands Academy of Arts and SciencesAmsterdam, the Netherlands (Source: As Seen From Here)
Source: As Seen From Here - January 19, 2012 Category: Opthalmology Authors: JYoungMD at gmail.com Source Type: podcasts