This site complies with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information: verify here.

Deputy Director of the CEBM, GP and clinical lecturer at the University of Oxford.

Cardiology trainee and clinical research fellow at the University of Oxford

See Carl Heneghan in action in the CEBM's workshop videos.
Click here
The horrors of the recent earthquake in Haiti have dominated the news media worldwide, making the UN label it as the “worst disaster it has ever faced”. Obama has enlisted the help of his two immediate Presidential predecessors (Bush and Clinton) to tackle this tragedy.
South Africa, with a population of 50 million, has nearly 6 million people infected with HIV — more than any other country in the world. AIDS-related diseases kill nearly 1,000 South Africans every day.
If you read about the early history of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in America, it is hard to not be struck by the public health consequences of apathy and discrimination of policymakers, health service providers and researchers. These were my feelings when I read “And the Band Played On: Politics, People, and the AIDS Epidemic”, by Randy Shilts, a few years ago. The tragedy is that many of the same issues Shilts wrote about 22 years ago are still alive in Africa today.
Recent comments
3 weeks 13 hours ago
6 weeks 1 day ago
6 weeks 1 day ago
6 weeks 1 day ago
6 weeks 4 days ago
6 weeks 6 days ago
7 weeks 2 days ago
7 weeks 2 days ago
8 weeks 6 days ago
8 weeks 6 days ago