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"Bradley, Stephen"
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Tibet
Lonely Planet: The world's leading travel guide publisher Lonely Planet Tibet is your passport to the most relevant, up-to-date advice on what to see and skip, and what hidden discoveries await you. Hike around sacred Mt Kailash, join pilgrims at the Jokhang, Tibet's holiest sanctum, or view Mt Everest unobstructed from Rongphu Monastery; all with your trusted travel companion. Get to the heart of Tibet and begin your journey now!
Forget about replacing doctors with AI—just get our computers to work
2024
Patients don’t need AI doctors, but better technology could allow medics to spend more time caring for patients
Journal Article
Subterranean London : cracking the capital
Peel back the layers under a London street and you'll discover a haunting, dreamlike world of hand-laid brick sewers, forgotten tube stations, World War II evacuation shelters, secret government bunkers, and tunnel boring machines laying new sewer, communication, and transport grids. Bradley L. Garrett has worked with explorers of subterranean London to collect an astonishing array of images documenting forbidden infiltrations into the secret bowels of the city. This book takes readers through progressively deeper levels of historical London architecture below the streets. Beautifully designed to allow for detailed viewing and featuring bespoke map illustrations by artist Stephen Walter, this unique book takes readers to locations few dare to go, and even fewer succeed in accessing.
Central Asia
Get to the heart of Central Asia with relevant, up-to-date advice on what to see and skip, and what hidden discoveries await you in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. Includes special features on visa and border information; the Silk Road, community-based tourism; and other activities.
Increases in GP cancer referrals reflect successful health policy, not accidental overmedicalisation
2023
In the same period that two week wait referrals doubled, cancer outcomes have improved markedly, with fewer patients diagnosed through emergency presentations3 and more patients diagnosed as having earlier stage disease.4 Evidence from large observational studies has vindicated general practitioners’ increasingly circumspect approach to possible presentations of cancer, with patients attending practices that use two week wait pathways more readily benefiting from improved outcomes.45 Mathew notes that conversion rates have fallen, but this is the inevitable and expected consequence of GPs responding to guidance by adopting lower referral thresholds for suspected cancer.6 Cancer conversion rates could be increased, but, excepting a technological breakthrough, any such trend would only be achieved by discouraging referrals for less clear cut cancer presentations and would come with adverse consequences for stage of disease at diagnosis and survival. BMJ 2023; 381: p1075. 10.1136/bmj.p1075 37192772 2 Round T Ashworth M L’Esperance V Møller H. Cancer detection via primary care urgent referral and association with practice characteristics: a retrospective cross-sectional study in England from 2009/2010 to 2018/2019. BMJ 2015; 351: h5102. 10.1136/bmj.h5102 26462713 6 Round T Gildea C Ashworth M Møller H. Association between use of urgent suspected cancer referral and mortality and stage at diagnosis: a 5-year national cohort study.
Journal Article
Tomorrow’s patients: preferences and interests are not synonymous
by
Bradley, Stephen H
in
Patients
2023
Journal Article