Providing high quality care in a cost-efficient way remains the greatest challenge for hospitals and healthcare systems around the world


BMJ Best Practice helps healthcare institutions ensure better, safer care by providing their multiprofessional teams with fast access to the latest information to support their clinical decisions.
Structured around the clinical workflow and updated daily, BMJ Best Practice uses the latest evidence-based research, guidelines and expert opinion to offer step-by-step guidance on diagnosis, prognosis, treatment and prevention.
We know that you need:
- Your healthcare professionals to have access to the latest and most trusted information with links to guidelines and evidence to increase the speed and accuracy of diagnosis and treatment decisions
- To support the ongoing professional development of your multidisciplinary teams
- To support junior doctors as they make the transition from medical school to the hospital setting, with fast access to information to support diagnosis and treatment
- To ensure that patients’ comorbidities are being recognised when diagnoses are made and treatment plans developed
- To healthcare professionals easy access to the latest clinical information within the patient workflow through EHR integration

Recently a doctor told me how information he accessed through BMJ Best Practice had helped him save his patient’s life. You simply can’t overstate the importance of information.”
Lisa JenkinsonSenior Library Assistant, UK.
Rising to the comorbidities challenge
One in three adults suffer from multiple chronic conditions and most patients in the acute setting have more than one medical condition. Our Comorbidities Manager is fully integrated into BMJ Best Practice, the clinical decision support tool that helps professionals treat the whole patient.
We are the only point of care tool that supports the management of the whole patient by including guidance on the treatment of a patient’s acute condition alongside their pre-existing comorbidities. Follow the link below to find out more.

Treating each disease in a patient as if it exists in isolation will lead to less good outcomes and complicate and duplicate interactions with the healthcare system.
Christopher J M Whitty