Kamran Abbasi | |
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Kamran Abbasi is the editor-in-chief of the British Medical Journal (BMJ), a physician, visiting professor at the Department of Primary Care and Public Health, Imperial College, London, editor of the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine (JRSM), journalist, cricket writer and broadcaster, who contributed to the expansion of international editions of the BMJ and has argued that medicine cannot exist in a political void.
He was raised in Yorkshire, graduated in medicine from Leeds School of Medicine in 1992 and worked in general medicine before commencing a career in journal editing in 1997, beginning with the BMJ, followed by the Bulletin of the World Health Organization and later the JRSM. He is a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and the Royal College of Physicians of London.
Abbasi has been a consultant editor for PLOS Medicine and has created e-learning resources for professional development of doctors, including BMJ Learning and the Royal Society of Medicine's video lecture service.
He has authored books on cricket; Zindabad; The English Chronicles: a Modern History of Pakistan Cricket, published in 2012 and Englistan: An immigrant's journey on the turbulent winds of Pakistan cricket in 2020.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, he has produced a series in the JRSM titled "Spotlight on COVID-19", and written on the UK's response to COVID-19, including the provision of personal protective equipment for frontline staff, preparedness for the pandemic, the fear of going into hospital and political accountability.
Kamran Abbasi was born in Lahore, Pakistan and moved to Rotherham, Yorkshire in 1974. [1] [2] He completed his early education at Oakwood School before attending the Thomas Rotherham College, both in Rotherham, South Yorkshire. In 1992, he graduated in medicine from Leeds School of Medicine. [3]
In 1997, following five years in internal medicine in both Yorkshire and London, [3] [4] he joined the BMJ from the Royal London and St Bartholomew's Hospitals. He took up the post of editorial registrar and then assistant editor, before becoming deputy editor in 2002 and acting editor in 2004. He was influenced by editor Richard Smith. [3] He took up the appointment of editor-in-chief of the BMJ on 1 January 2022, succeeding Fiona Godlee. [5]
In 1999, he published a series of six articles in the BMJ looking at the role of the World Bank in global health. [6] [7] [8] A year later, he was appointed editor of the Bulletin of the World Health Organization . [3] [9]
Abbasi became the BMJ's executive editor for content, developing the journal's expansion internationally, digitally, and in print, [4] particularly the BMJ International editions, [10] which he considers his greatest achievement. [3] The first of the themed issues was in 2003, [11] and shortly after, he was one of the three main organisers of the BMJ's first international theme issue on South Asia, where investment in primary care and particularly the education of girls in Sri Lanka and Kerala was shown to be beneficial. [12] Their interest and continued work in South Asia has led to the BMJ offering a dedicated page to South Asia on their website since 2013. [13]
In October 2004, while he was acting editor of the BMJ, Abbasi became the recipient of an unusually large number of responses to a BMJ article written by Derek Summerfield, who published his personal view over what he saw as organised violations of the fourth Geneva Convention by the Israeli army in Gaza and their effects on public health. The reaction to that article was later analysed by Karl Sabbagh and revealed the hostility that editors can receive when publishing on a sensitive issue. [14] In response to the messages sent to the journal's website and the over 1000 emails sent directly to Abbasi, a sample number were published on-line within 24 hours of submission. Sabbagh explained that the published messages "were a skewed sample of what had been received, as abusive and obscene contributions were not posted", [14] In response to these messages, many of which "abused the BMJ or Abbasi personally", [14] Abbasi published an editorial entitled: "Should journals mix medicine and politics?" Abbasi noted that the messages were "largely biased and inflammatory on both sides" [15] and that a number of people felt that dialogue could resolve the conflict. He specified that "in a state of conflict [those] views will be sometime abrasive and unpalatable" and argued that medicine cannot exist in a political void. [14] [15]
In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, he published his commentary on the "scandals of COVID-19", which included the topics of personal protective equipment for frontline National Health Service staff, [16] [17] the UK's preparedness for the pandemic, [18] and the fear of going into hospital. [19] In May 2020, he co-authored a paper titled "The UK's public health response to covid-19". [20] Together with Bobbie Jacobson from the Johns Hopkins University and Gabriel Scally, they described the UK's response to the COVID-19 pandemic as "too little, too late, too flawed", with no adequate plan for community-based case-finding, testing, and contact tracing. [21] Their findings were published in the New Statesman , [21] and discussed in Medscape , [22] the British Journal of Social Psychology [23] and the Practice Nurse . [24] His editorials relating to COVID-19 for the JRSM appear in a series titled "Spotlight on COVID-19". [25] During the pandemic he has written on the politicization of science, [26] and following the global death toll from COVID-19 surpassing two million by February 2021, he used the term "social murder" to call for political accountability. [27]
Abbasi has been editor of the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine since 2005. [10] [28] He also founded BMJ Learning, an e-learning resource. [10]
He has been appointed visiting professor at the Department of Primary Care and Public Health, Imperial College, London, [29] member of the General Advisory Council of the King's Fund, a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and the Royal College of Physicians of London, and patron of the South Asian Health Foundation. He is a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and the Royal College of Physicians of London. [4] [30]
He has been a consultant editor for PLOS Medicine and has created three e-learning resources for professional development of doctors, including BMJ Learning and the Royal Society of Medicine's video lecture service. [4]
He has consulted for a number of organisations including Harvard University, the NHS, the World Health Organization and McKinsey & Co. [4]
He has also made contributions on radio and television, [4] particularly with Mark Porter. In this role, Abbasi has acted as a sceptic to BBC Radio 4's weekly medical programme, Inside Health. [31] He also writes for Dawn , a Pakistani English-language newspaper. [10]
He has in several years been listed as one of "the 50 most influential BAME people in health", by the Health Service Journal . [32] [33] [34]
Following cricket since the 1970s, Abbasi has been an international writer on Pakistan cricket since 1996, starting as a blogger for Cricinfo.com with a blog called Pak Spin, and with a particular interest in the politics of cricket. [35] [36] [37]
He was the first Asian columnist in an English cricket publication when he started writing for Wisden Cricket Monthly. [10] [ when? ] In 2000, in one Wisden Cricket entry, he reported on Hansie Cronje and the South Africa cricket match fixing and responded by saying that the "enigma of match fixing will remain. But the reflex judgement that white is good and brown is bad is now less sustainable than it ever was. For that at least, thank you, Hansie". [38]
In 2004, he co-authored a paper on the influence of a 1986 Pakistani victory in cricket over India on subsequent matches up to 2003. [39] In 2012, he published a book titled The English Chronicles: Zindabad: A Modern History of Pakistan Cricket. [35] Eight years later he wrote Englistan: An immigrant's journey on the turbulent winds of Pakistan cricket. [40]
Archibald Leman Cochrane was a Scottish physician noted for his book, Effectiveness and Efficiency: Random Reflections on Health Services, which advocated the use of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to improve clinical trials and medical interventions. His advocacy of RCTs eventually led to the creation of the Cochrane Library database of systematic reviews, the UK Cochrane Centre in Oxford and Cochrane, an international organization of review groups that are based at research institutions worldwide. He is known as one of the fathers of modern clinical epidemiology and is considered to be the originator of the idea of evidence-based medicine. The Archie Cochrane Archive is held at the Archie Cochrane Library at University Hospital Llandough, Penarth.
The Lancet is a weekly peer-reviewed general medical journal and one of the oldest of its kind. It is also one of the world's highest-impact academic journals. It was founded in England in 1823.
The BMJ is a weekly peer-reviewed medical journal, published by BMJ Group, which in turn is wholly-owned by the British Medical Association (BMA). The BMJ has editorial freedom from the BMA. It is one of the world's oldest general medical journals. Previously called the British Medical Journal, the title was officially shortened to BMJ in 1988, and then changed to The BMJ in 2014. The journal is published by BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, a subsidiary of the British Medical Association (BMA). The current editor-in-chief of The BMJ is Kamran Abbasi, who was appointed in January 2022.
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