Article Text
Ethics abstract
Knowledge, attitude and practices regarding the status of ‘animal ingredients in medicines’ among medical professionals in a tertiary care hospital in Mumbai: a cross-sectional survey
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Footnotes
These are commissioned only articles offered to authors following submissions where the topic or findings are considered to be of some interest to JME readership but not at the level of a peer-reviewed article. Original papers should not be submitted under this article type. These resubmissions are not externally peer reviewed.
Competing interests None.
Ethics approval Ethics approval was provided by the Institutional Ethics Committee, Grant Medical College, Mumbai.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; internally peer reviewed.
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- Prion proteins and the gut: une liaison dangereuse?
- Using an epidemiological framework and bovine spongiform encephalopathy investigation questionnaire to investigate suspect bovine spongiform encephalopathy cases: an example from a bovine spongiform encephalopathy case in Ireland in 2015
- Molecular neurology of prion disease
- BSE: the further we go, the less we know
- Prion protein genotype survey confirms low frequency of scrapie-resistant K222 allele in British goat herds
- Four BSE cases with an L-BSE molecular profile in cattle from Great Britain
- Suitability of common drugs for patients who avoid animal products
- First report of prion-related protein gene (PRNT) polymorphisms in cattle
- The man who dared to foretell the future
- The brain to gut pathway: a possible route of prion transmission