All Stories

  1. European specialty and specialist practice in legal and forensic medicine
  2. Animal Attacks and Injuries: Nonfatal
  3. Asphyxia: Clinical Findings
  4. Carbon Monoxide Exposure: Clinical Findings—Sequelae in Survivors
  5. Custody: In-Custody Deaths—United Kingdom and Europe
  6. Female Genital Mutilation
  7. Forensic & Legal Medicine in the United Kingdom
  8. Forensic & Legal Medicine, History of
  9. Injury, Fatal and Nonfatal: Blunt Force Injury
  10. Injury, Fatal and Nonfatal: Injury Documentation
  11. Injury, Fatal and Nonfatal: Sharp and Cutting-Edge Wounds
  12. Injury, Recreational: Water Sports Injury
  13. Nonfatal Strangulation
  14. Restraint Techniques, Injuries, and Death: Baton
  15. Restraint Techniques, Injuries, and Death: Handcuffs
  16. Restraint Techniques, Injuries, and Death: Irritant Sprays and Riot Control Agents
  17. Restraint Techniques, Injuries, and Death: Kinetic Energy Projectiles
  18. Restraint Techniques, Injuries, and Death: Monitoring of Less-Lethal Weapons
  19. Rights of Children and Legal Protection
  20. Sexual Offenses, Adult: Injuries and Findings After Sexual Contact
  21. Substance Use: Substance Use and Crime
  22. The Medical Examiner System in England & Wales
  23. Torture and Cruel or Inhuman and Degrading Treatment: Physical Findings
  24. Changes in the nature and outcome of notifications to HM Coroner from the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, UK, before and after the introduction of a medical examiner service: 2018 versus 2022
  25. The role of a Medical Examiner Service in an acute NHS hospital: Perspectives from doctors and next of kin
  26. Current status of undergraduate teaching in forensic & legal medicine in Europe
  27. Provision of forensic healthcare services for police custodial settings in England, Wales and Northern Ireland: Current practice and implications for other services?
  28. The workload of a medical examiner service at an acute National Health Service hospital during the COVID-19 pandemic: The Norfolk & Norwich University Hospital experience
  29. Release arrangements for immigration detainees are medically unsafe
  30. Alcohol
  31. Assessment, classification and documentation of injury
  32. Ballistic injuries
  33. Death from natural causes
  34. Deaths and injury in infancy
  35. Heat, cold and electrical trauma
  36. Identification of the living and the dead
  37. Immersion and drowning
  38. Licit and illicit drugs
  39. Medicinal poisons
  40. Medicolegal aspects of death
  41. Miscellaneous poisons
  42. Police custodial healthcare
  43. Pressure to the neck and asphyxia deaths
  44. Principles of forensic practice
  45. Principles of forensic science and crime scene investigation
  46. Principles of toxicology
  47. Regional injuries and patterns of injury
  48. Restraint and control techniques
  49. Safeguarding and protection of children and vulnerable adults
  50. Sexual assault, genitoanal injury and female genital mutilation
  51. Simpson's Forensic Medicine
  52. The appearance of the body after death
  53. The ethics of medical practice
  54. Torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment
  55. Transportation medicine
  56. The use of spit guards (also known as spit hoods) by police services in England, Wales and Northern Ireland: to prevent transmission of infection or another form of restraint?
  57. Confidentiality & consent in police custody: General principles
  58. Healthcare and forensic medical aspects of police detainees, suspects and complainants in Europe
  59. European council of legal medicine (ECLM) guidelines for the examination of suspected elder abuse
  60. So you want a career in forensic and legal medicine?
  61. People can die from opiate withdrawal
  62. Healthcare and forensic medical services in police custody – to degrade or to improve?
  63. Complaints against health-care professionals providing police custodial and forensic medical/health-care services and sexual offence examiner services in England, Wales and Northern Ireland
  64. Current Practice in Forensic Medicine
  65. Asphyxia: Clinical Findings
  66. Forensic Medicine, History of
  67. Injury, Fatal and Nonfatal: Injury Documentation
  68. Restraint Techniques, Injuries, and Death: Baton
  69. Restraint Techniques, Injuries, and Death: Handcuffs
  70. Substance Misuse: Substance Misuse and Crime
  71. Statement on virginity testing
  72. Court skills
  73. Symptoms and Signs of Substance Misuse
  74. Guidelines for photography of cutaneous marks and injuries: a multi-professional perspective
  75. Focussing on the future: Survey results on the image capture of patterned cutaneous injuries
  76. Provision of clinical forensic medical services in Australia: A qualitative survey 2011/12
  77. Effects of incapacitant spray deployed in the restraint and arrest of detainees in the Metropolitan Police Service area, London, UK: a prospective study
  78. Trends in less-lethal use of force techniques by police services within England and Wales: 2007–2011
  79. Statement on access to relevant medical and other health records and relevant legal records for forensic medical evaluations of alleged torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
  80. Problems of capacity, consent and confidentiality
  81. Forensic Medicine
  82. Conducted energy devices: Pilot analysis of (non-)attributability of death using a modified Naranjo algorithm
  83. Quality of photographic images provided for injury interpretation: room for improvement?
  84. Rules and scales used in measurement in the forensic setting: measured—and found wanting!
  85. Excited delirium syndrome (ExDS): Redefining an old diagnosis
  86. Simpson's Forensic Medicine
  87. Current Practice in Forensic Medicine
  88. Clinical Forensic Medicine: History and Development
  89. Injury Assessment, Documentation, and Interpretation
  90. Oxford Handbook of Forensic Medicine
  91. Age Estimation in the Living
  92. Medical implications of the Taser
  93. Healthcare issues of detainees in police custody in London, UK
  94. Provision of forensic medical services to police custody suites in England and Wales: Current practice
  95. Assault: Sexually Motivated
  96. In response to: Bond P., Kingston P. & Nevill A. Operational efficiency of healthcare in police custody suites: comparison of nursing and medical provision. Journal of Advanced Nursing 60 (2) 127–134.
  97. Pseudosclerodermatous triad of perniosis, pulp atrophy and ‘parrot-beaked’ clawing of the nails – a newly recognized syndrome of chronic crack-cocaine use
  98. Forensic Experts
  99. A Review of: “Encyclopedia of Forensic and Legal Medicine”
  100. Prospective evaluation of a peripherally administered three‐in‐one parenteral nutrition product in dogs
  101. Book Review Encyclopedia of Forensic and Legal Medicine Edited by Jason Payne-James, Roger W. Byard, Tracey S. Corey, and Carol Henderson. 2084 pp., plus index, in four volumes, illustrated. Oxford, England, Elsevier Academic Press, 2005. $1095. 0-12-5...
  102. The journal, special issues & evidence
  103. Nutritional support
  104. Near miss incidents in police custody suites in London in 2003: A feasibility study
  105. Patterns of illicit drug use of prisoners in police custody in London, UK
  106. ASPHYXIA
  107. DELIBERATE SELF-HARM, PATTERNS
  108. Editor-In-Chief
  109. HISTORY OF FORENSIC MEDICINE
  110. History and Development of Clinical Forensic Medicine
  111. INJURY, FATAL AND NONFATAL | Documentation
  112. PROFESSIONAL BODIES | United Kingdom
  113. SUBSTANCE MISUSE | Crime
  114. Clinical Toxicology: Principles & Mechanisms
  115. Clinical Toxicology: Principles & Mechanisms
  116. Medicolegal Essentials in Healthcare
  117. Legal institutions and the legal process
  118. Artificial nutrition support in clinical practice Jason Payne-James, George Grimble, David Silk Greenwich Medical Media, L. London, 2001, 798 pp
  119. Artificial Nutrition Support in Clinical Practice
  120. Postinflammatory hyperpigmentation following torture
  121. Jason Payne-James, Anthony Busuttil, William Smock (Eds.) Forensic Medicine: Clinical and Pathological Aspects, First publication, Greenwich Medical Media, 2003, 832 pages, over 500 color, black and white figures and line illustrations, hardcover, ISBN...
  122. Margaret M. Stark and Jason Payne-James. Symptoms and Signs of Substance Misuse, Greenwich Medical Media, London, 2003, 58 pages, 6 tables, without figure, paper back, ISBN 1-84110-106-0, EUR 12.50
  123. Delayed presentation of carotid dissection, cerebral ischemia, and infarction following blunt trauma: two cases
  124. Artificial Nutrition Support in Clinical Practice. Edited by Jason Payne-James, George Grimble and David Silk. 2nd edition. Greenwich Medical Media, 2001. Hardback. £125. ISBN 1 9001 51979.
  125. Drug-facilitated sexual assault, 'ladettes' and alcohol
  126. Full time forensic pathology service
  127. The validity of self-reported substance misuse amongst detained persons in police custody
  128. Substance misuse and the legal system in England and Wales
  129. Use of peripheral parenteral nutritional support in dogs and cats
  130. Cost-effectiveness of nutrition support teams. Are they necessary?
  131. Alcohol misuse in clinical forensic medicine
  132. Book Reviews : Symptoms and Early Warning Signs by Dr Michael Apple and Dr Jason Payne-James. Editor: Dr R Macgregor. Published by Penguin Books Ltd, 1995. 497 pp. £9.99. Paperback. ISBN 0 14 017437 0
  133. Clinical Forensic Medicine
  134. Aggression against Doctors
  135. Artificial nutrition support in hospitals in the UnitedKingdom — 1994: Third national survey
  136. Artificial nutrition support in clinical practice. Edited by Jason Payne-James, George Grimble and David Silk
  137. Violence in Clinical Forensic Medicine
  138. Artificial Nutrition Support Terminology
  139. Salivary alcohol measurement: use in clinical forensic medical practice
  140. Prevalence of HIV risk factors for individuals examined in clinical forensic medicine
  141. Assault and Injury in Clinical Forensic Medical Practice
  142. Editorial
  143. Palliation of malignant dysphagia by ethanol induced tumour necrosis.
  144. Review: First Choice for Total Parenteral Nutrition: The Peripheral Route
  145. Initial response and subsequent course of Crohn's disease treated with elemental diet or prednisolone.
  146. Home nutrition survey in the UK: The patient's perspective
  147. Short term benefits of post-operative oral dietary supplements in surgical patients
  148. Diarrhoea, dysentery, and food poisoning
  149. Artificial nutrition support in hospitals in the United Kingdom — 1991: Second national survey
  150. Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy feeding.
  151. Retrograde (Ascending) Bacterial Contamination of Enteral Diet Administration Systems
  152. Glycine nitrogen in total parenteral nutrition: two prospective clinical trials comparing the efficacy of high and low glycine containing amino acid solutions.
  153. Survival of peripheral intravenous infusions.
  154. Topical nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory gel for the prevention of peripheral vein thrombophlebitis
  155. Peripheral Parenteral Nutrition
  156. Palliation for esophageal and cardial cancer
  157. Symptomatic Cervical Oesophageal Ectopic (Heterotopic) Gastric Mucosa Treated with Omeprazole
  158. Hepatobiliary Dysfunction Associated with Total Parenteral Nutrition
  159. Use of elemental diets in the treatment of Crohn's disease by gastroenterologists.
  160. Evaluation of 13C-urea breath test in the detection of Helicobacter pylori and in monitoring the effect of tripotassium dicitratobismuthate in non-ulcer dyspepsia.
  161. Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy
  162. Novel substrates and nutritional support: possible role of ornithine α-ketoglutarate
  163. Occult abdominal wall peristomal abscess following percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy
  164. Palliation of malignant dysphagia.
  165. Clinical nutrition support.
  166. 7 g weighted versus unweighted polyurethane nasoenteral tubes—Spontaneous transpyloric passage and clinical performance: a controlled randomised trial
  167. Gastroenterologists and nutritional support.
  168. Advanced rectal cancer.
  169. Metastatic Carcinoid Tumour in Association with Small Bowel Ischaemia and Infarction
  170. Use of ethanol-induced tumor necrosis to palliate dysphagia in patients with esophagogastric cancer
  171. Inflammatory bowel disease: nutritional implications and treatment
  172. A trial of mezlocillin versus cefuroxime with or without metronidazole for the prevention of wound sepsis after biliary and gastrointestinal surgery
  173. 6 Enteral nutrition: background, indications and management
  174. Total parenteral nutrition as primary treatment in Crohn's disease--RIP?
  175. Spontaneous transpyloric passage and performance of 'fine bore' polyurethane feeding tubes: a controlled clinical trial
  176. Bowel sounds
  177. Sigmoid volvulus in association with Crohn's disease of the colon
  178. Symptomatic fibrous dysplasia of the right first rib excised via a posterolateral thoracotomy.
  179. Carcinoid tumour arising in a Meckel's diverticulum