The Student Room Group

Good websites for Medicine/Healthcare news?

Can anyone recommend a good website that provides information/news about healthcare and medicine? :smile:

I have been looking at NetDoctor and WebMD, however I'm just trying to broaden my range. Thought you guys might be able to help me out? :biggrin:

Thanks in advance!
BMJ
Student BMJ
BBC health
Guardian health bit

Is this in general or are you thinking of interviews?
Reply 2
I also found nhs news "behind the headlines" to be very helpful :smile:
Original post by yum-yum
I also found nhs news "behind the headlines" to be very helpful :smile:


I agree. I will often look at this website after reading something from another source to get the bare facts on it.

http://www.nhs.uk/news/Pages/NewsIndex.aspx
Original post by lsaul95
Can anyone recommend a good website that provides information/news about healthcare and medicine? :smile:

I have been looking at NetDoctor and WebMD, however I'm just trying to broaden my range. Thought you guys might be able to help me out? :biggrin:

Thanks in advance!


I'm assuming that you want to apply for medicine, so apart from what has been mentioned, I used the GMC website which has interactive case studies where you choose how to deal with patients and it gives you feedback on your choices and links to relative legislation.

The site is: http://www.gmc-uk.org/guidance/case_studies.asp
Reply 5
Original post by confused dot com
I'm assuming that you want to apply for medicine, so apart from what has been mentioned, I used the GMC website which has interactive case studies where you choose how to deal with patients and it gives you feedback on your choices and links to relative legislation.

The site is: http://www.gmc-uk.org/guidance/case_studies.asp


This was really helpful, I did all of these before my interviews, much more interesting than just reading stuff :biggrin:
Reply 6
Original post by <XOXO>
BMJ
Student BMJ
BBC health
Guardian health bit

Is this in general or are you thinking of interviews?


Both really, I like staying in the loop about things I'm interested in but if it benefits my interview skills then it is a bonus! :smile:
Thanks


Original post by yum-yum
I also found nhs news "behind the headlines" to be very helpful :smile:


Thanks a lot :smile:

Original post by Steerforth
I agree. I will often look at this website after reading something from another source to get the bare facts on it.

http://www.nhs.uk/news/Pages/NewsIndex.aspx


Thanks for the link :smile:

Original post by confused dot com
I'm assuming that you want to apply for medicine, so apart from what has been mentioned, I used the GMC website which has interactive case studies where you choose how to deal with patients and it gives you feedback on your choices and links to relative legislation.

The site is: http://www.gmc-uk.org/guidance/case_studies.asp


Ahh that is brilliant, I like how it's interactive, thanks! :biggrin:
Reply 7
BBC Health is good - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health.
Reply 8
Original post by Beska
BBC Health is good - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health.


I'm used to the BBC website interface so I will be using this a lot!
Thanks Beska :smile:
- BBC Health
- Telegraph/Guardian Health (and also The Times, but they've firewalled their site so either read it in hard copy or pay for subscription)
- NHS Behind the Headlines -- Really worth it. I would first read a story on the above, and then try to find its parallel here to put everything into context.
- Universities also have 'News' pages where they big up their own research advancements and findings. These are a good summary of what they've done and it's written in an accessible way for the public.

There is NO NEED for you to read any journals such The Lancet, BMJ, Student BMJ, JAMA, NEJM... They are not aimed at the general public and are pitched as scientific documents. Rarely do even pre-clinical medical students keep up with the journals, research methods etc. as half the time it takes ages to decipher all the implications of the statistics into "lay" English.

Reading a bit of Ben Goldacre's column on the Guardian will also do you no harm. Just be careful though when you are reading stories from newspapers, check if they are an article trying to convey (hopefully) accurate information or whether its a columnist putting their own personal skew on a story.
Reply 10
Original post by purplefrog
- BBC Health
- Telegraph/Guardian Health (and also The Times, but they've firewalled their site so either read it in hard copy or pay for subscription)
- NHS Behind the Headlines -- Really worth it. I would first read a story on the above, and then try to find its parallel here to put everything into context.
- Universities also have 'News' pages where they big up their own research advancements and findings. These are a good summary of what they've done and it's written in an accessible way for the public.

There is NO NEED for you to read any journals such The Lancet, BMJ, Student BMJ, JAMA, NEJM... They are not aimed at the general public and are pitched as scientific documents. Rarely do even pre-clinical medical students keep up with the journals, research methods etc. as half the time it takes ages to decipher all the implications of the statistics into "lay" English.

Reading a bit of Ben Goldacre's column on the Guardian will also do you no harm. Just be careful though when you are reading stories from newspapers, check if they are an article trying to convey (hopefully) accurate information or whether its a columnist putting their own personal skew on a story.


Thanks man, I will do, I've been using BBC Health a lot lately, it's pretty good for just the basic bits :smile:

Reading up on Universities news pages is a good idea and definitely something that will benefit me when it comes to Interviews, etc. I owe you some rep :biggrin:
Original post by lsaul95
Thanks man, I will do, I've been using BBC Health a lot lately, it's pretty good for just the basic bits :smile:

Reading up on Universities news pages is a good idea and definitely something that will benefit me when it comes to Interviews, etc. I owe you some rep :biggrin:


haha glad to help :smile: and rep is always warmly welcome :colone:

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