Harms in Healthcare
Kellogg College with the Centre for Evidence Based Medicine at the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences will present a unique insight on the individual and institutional self-interests in research, combined with increased global competition that are currently leading to substantial harms in healthcare. In addition, a growing body of research on adverse drug reactions has uncovered that there is considerable room for improvement in the public understanding of this little known area. We will question whether medicine is broken – do patients and the public ever fully understand what doctors, academics and regulators have been permitted to do to them and ­what would their reaction be? How the media contribute to harms and the growing problem of overdiagnosis, creating patients from a healthy population. We’ll also discuss the impact of a £500 million deficit in the public purse from stockpiling the controversial flu drug Tamiflu.

This event is part of the University of Oxford’s Alumni Weekend programme. The event is open to all, including members of the public.
Date: 19 September 2015, 14:30
Venue: University Museum of Natural History, Parks Road OX1 3PW
Speakers: Professor Carl Heneghan (Nuffield Department of primary Care Health Sciences), Dr Ben Goldacre (Dept of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford), Dr Jeffrey Aronson (Nuffield Department of primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford), Dr Beth Shinkins (Nuffield Department of primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford), Dr Kamal Mahtani (Nuffield Department of primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford)
Organising department: Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences
Part of: Oxford Primary Care Public Talks
Topics:
Booking required?: Required
Booking url: http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/harms-in-healthcare-tickets-17510637789
Audience: Public
Editors: Anne Bowtell, Dan Richards-Doran