Showing 1 - 20 results of 455 for search 'Doctor (Doctor Who)', query time: 0.11s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Career preferences of doctors who qualified in the United Kingdom in 1993 compared with those of doctors qualifying in 1974, 1977, 1980, and 1983. by Lambert, T, Goldacre, M, Edwards, C, Parkhouse, J

    Published 1996
    “…OBJECTIVE: To report the career preferences of doctors who qualified in the United Kingdom in 1993 and to compare their choices with those of earlier cohorts of qualifiers. …”
    Journal article
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    Doctors who kill themselves: a study of the methods used for suicide. by Hawton, K, Clements, A, Simkin, S, Malmberg, A

    Published 2000
    “…Death entry data for doctors who died by suicide or undetermined cause between 1979 and 1995 in England and Wales were used to compare methods used for suicide by doctors with those used by the general population. …”
    Journal article
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    GPs' job satisfaction: doctors who chose general practice early or late. by Lambert, T, Smith, F, Goldacre, M

    Published 2013
    “…BACKGROUND: In the UK many practising GPs did not choose general practice as their first choice of career when they originally graduated as doctors. AIM: To compare job satisfaction of GPs who chose general practice early or later in their career. …”
    Journal article
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    Career destinations and views in 1998 of the doctors who qualified in the United Kingdom in 1993. by Lambert, T, Goldacre, M

    Published 2002
    “… OBJECTIVE: To report career destinations and views in 1998 of doctors who qualified in the United Kingdom (UK) in 1993. …”
    Journal article
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    Postal surveys of Doctors' careers: Who writes comments and what do they write about? by Evans, J, Lambert, T, Goldacre, M

    Published 2005
    “…This study aimed to characterise the doctors who wrote comments at the end of a postal questionnaire about their careers, to quantify the frequency of negative comments, and to study relationships between the questionnaire content and the topics of comment. …”
    Journal article
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    Doctors who considered but did not pursue specific clinical specialties as careers: questionnaire surveys. by Goldacre, M, Goldacre, R, Lambert, T

    Published 2012
    “…The surgical specialties were the current choice of 20% of respondents and had been considered but rejected by 32% of doctors who rejected a specialty. Issues of work-life balance were the single most common factor, particularly for women, in not pursuing the surgical specialties, emergency medicine, the medical hospital specialties, paediatrics, and obstetrics and gynaecology. …”
    Journal article
  8. 8

    Training tomorrow’s doctors by Simpkin, A, Walesby, K

    Published 2017
    “…Within this complex journey, there is a need to train the doctors of tomorrow to be humanistic, competent, patient-centred, resilient beings who will thrive in a challenging environment, striving to advance medicine. …”
    Journal article
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    The evolution of the doctor-patient relationship. by Kaba, R, Sooriakumaran, P

    Published 2007
    “…The doctor-patient relationship has undergone a transition throughout the ages. …”
    Journal article
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    Working as a doctor when acutely ill: comments made by doctors responding to UK surveys by Smith, F, Goldacre, M, Lambert, T

    Published 2016
    “…<p><strong>Objectives:</strong> We undertook multi-purpose surveys of doctors who qualified in the United Kingdom between 1993 and 2012. …”
    Journal article
  12. 12

    Why UK-trained doctors leave the UK: Cross-sectional survey of doctors in New Zealand by Sharma, A, Lambert, T, Goldacre, M

    Published 2012
    “…Participants: UK-trained doctors from 10 graduation-year cohorts who were registered with the New Zealand Medical Council in 2009. …”
    Journal article
  13. 13

    Why UK-trained doctors leave the UK: cross-sectional survey of doctors in New Zealand. by Sharma, A, Lambert, T, Goldacre, M

    Published 2012
    “…Participants UK-trained doctors from 10 graduation-year cohorts who were registered with the New Zealand Medical Council in 2009. …”
    Journal article
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    Demographic characteristics of doctors who intend to follow clinical academic careers: UK national questionnaire surveys by Smith, F, Lambert, T, Goldacre, M

    Published 2014
    “…A higher percentage of Asian (4.8%) than White doctors (3.3%) wanted a long-term career as a clinical academic, as did a higher percentage of doctors who did an intercalated degree (5.6%) than others (2.2%) and a higher percentage of Oxbridge graduates (8.1%) than others (2.8%). …”
    Journal article
  16. 16

    Working as a doctor when chronically ill or disabled: comments made by doctors responding to UK surveys by Lambert, T, Smith, F, Goldacre, M

    Published 2016
    “…<br/>Participants: Questionnaires were sent one, five and 10 years after graduation to 44,539 doctors who qualified between 1993 and 2012 in the UK: 38,613 questionnaires were returned and 11,859 respondents provided comments made by doctors about their training or work. …”
    Journal article
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    Mortality among doctors in different occupations. by Doll, R, Peto, R

    Published 1977
    “…A total of 20540 male doctors who replied to a questionnaire on their smoking habits that was sent to them on 1 November 1951, and who were aged 35 years and over, were classified according to their occupation as listed in the Medical Directory for 1952 and followed up until 1 November 1971. …”
    Journal article
  20. 20

    Is overseas volunteering beneficial to NHS doctors? by Yeomans, D, Le, G, Pandit, H, Lavy, C

    Published 2017
    “…We have used dimensions from both tools as a method of evaluating the benefit to NHS doctors who volunteer overseas.</p> <h4>Methods</h4> <p>88 NHS volunteers participating with local colleagues in Primary Trauma Care and orthopaedic surgical training courses in sub-Saharan Africa were asked to complete an on-line self-assessment questionnaire 6 months following their return to the UK. …”
    Journal article