Published in BMJ on January 15, 2000
Time could be the active ingredient in post-trauma debriefing. BMJ (2000) 0.75
Dobson backed NICE ruling on flu drug. BMJ (1999) 4.60
Nestlé violates international marketing code, says audit. BMJ (2000) 4.57
NICE to rule on influenza flu drug zanamivir. BMJ (1999) 3.06
Global campaign to eradicate malaria. BMJ (2001) 3.06
Study shows growing inequalities in health in Britain. BMJ (1999) 2.96
Sexual and reproductive health: what about boys and men? Education and service provision are the keys to increasing involvement. BMJ (1999) 2.76
Baby food industry lobbies WHO on breast feeding advice. BMJ (2000) 2.67
African heads of state promise action against malaria. BMJ (2000) 2.47
San Francisco's HIV infection rate doubles. BMJ (2001) 2.06
The cost to global health of drug company profits. West J Med (2001) 1.61
Eli Lilly violates patients' privacy. BMJ (2001) 1.60
Global health agencies are accused of incompetence. BMJ (2000) 1.57
US trade action threatens Brazilian AIDS programme. BMJ (2001) 1.49
Protecting whistleblowers. Employers should respond to the message, not shoot the messenger. BMJ (2000) 1.33
UN condemns Australian plans for "safe injecting rooms". BMJ (2000) 1.24
US changes trade policy on essential medicines. BMJ (1999) 1.15
Drug companies cut HIV drug prices in the developing world. BMJ (2000) 1.06
Report condemns NHS complaints procedure. BMJ (1999) 1.03
Why journals should not publish articles funded by the tobacco industry. BMJ (2000) 1.01
Scientists unveil first draft of human genome. BMJ (2000) 1.01
Twenty years of AIDS, and no end in sight. A BMJ theme issue will refocus attention on this catastrophic epidemic. BMJ (2001) 0.84
Global alliance launches plan to eliminate lymphatic filariasis. BMJ (2000) 0.84
Promoting wellbeing among doctors. BMJ (2001) 0.83
Drug companies seek MS patients to lobby for new products. BMJ (2000) 0.81
Albumin industry launches global promotion. BMJ (2000) 0.79
Pen "amnesty" for doctors who shun drug companies. BMJ (2001) 0.79
Pfizer to sponsor European impotence awareness campaign. BMJ (2000) 0.79
Can complementary medicine be evidence-based? West J Med (2000) 0.76
US web site will publish list of "drug-free practitioners". West J Med (2001) 0.75
Rocket science. wjm launches a fast-track system for publishing important papers. West J Med (2000) 0.75
Sexual health. Medical training must acknowledge sexuality. BMJ (1993) 0.75
You can always pop a pill. West J Med (2001) 0.75
Solicitor in litigation case condemns tobacco industry. BMJ (2000) 0.75
Blair unable to fulfil pledge on health spending, says analysis. BMJ (2001) 0.75
British tobacco company denies "orchestrating smuggling". BMJ (2000) 0.75
Inquiry discovers fraudulent skin treatments. BMJ (2000) 0.75
Young less tolerant of mentally ill than the old. BMJ (1999) 0.75
Report finds persisting poverty and social exclusion. BMJ (1999) 0.75
Medicines control agency takes over GP research database. BMJ (1999) 0.75
New advice issued on prevention of sudden infant death. BMJ (2000) 0.75
Review clears Brompton surgeons. BMJ (1999) 0.75
Mental health services are failing children and adolescents. BMJ (1999) 0.75
Earlier inquiry found no evidence of criminal activity. BMJ (2000) 0.75
Cell biologist wins Nobel prize. BMJ (1999) 0.75
Government inquiry finds inadequate beds provision. BMJ (2000) 0.75
Donors reject screening panel for malaria projects. BMJ (2000) 0.75
Drug company issues warning about flu drug. BMJ (2000) 0.75
HIV disinformation. West J Med (2000) 0.75
Genesis, the voice of students. Wjm's new student section will be vital reading for physicians. West J Med (2001) 0.75
Survey finds that 1 in 10 children has a mental disorder. BMJ (1999) 0.75
Health minister announces initiatives on men's health. BMJ (2000) 0.75
World Bank funds private hospital in India. BMJ (2001) 0.75
Pop musicians boycott Nestlé promotion. BMJ (2001) 0.75