"To use the Foreign Office for vanity projects in this way is unforgivable."
Dame Emily Thornberry criticises No 10, after Sir Olly Robbins claims Downing St wanted to find a diplomatic role for former head of communications Lord Doyle.
We recently published our adult 💊 swallowing paper (https://t.co/4Zf6o5oxHN).
Our patient support leaflet has been adopted by Healthify 🇳🇿's health information & patient resources website https://t.co/r9bKkf6Z83
@LJMU_Health@LjmuPharmacy@ejlim8@YincentTse@AdamPRathbone
There are largely two types of academics: A and B. Their worlds are so different, so insular they don't even know the other type exists.
Type A:
> Comes from a middle, upper-middle class family
> Well-educated parents (with advanced degrees including PhDs)
> Parents map out their kid's career trajectory
> Parents teach academia's hidden curriculum: applications, admission essays, extracurriculars, and so on.
> Send the kid to a "good" school (private or private tutoring)
> Kid gets good grades
> Goes to Ivy League or Oxbridge or a similar top school for undergrad
> Decides to do a PhD
> Gets into another top program in a top school because of top undergrad school, duh
> Gets a well-connected supervisor during PhD
> Gets a tenure-track job offer from another top university in the final year of PhD even before graduation because of the supervisor, duh
> Fully understands the tenure clock
> Publishes papers, monographs on time
> Gets tenure
> Thinks PhD is easy, tenure is easy, academia is easy
> Marries a colleague in the same university
> Has kids
> The cycle repeats
Type B:
> Comes from a dysfunctional, working-class family
> Parents who barely graduate high school
> Parents with no idea what kind of education their kids need
> Goes to a no-name shit school with underqualified teachers
> Then goes to a community college or some such institution if lucky, joins the military if unlucky (KIA.exe)
> Reads a lot, become autodidact, becomes a half-decent writer
> Someone suggests, do a PhD, become a professor
> Likes the idea of academic life, starts applying to PhD programs
> Gets rejected from top programs because don't have good recommendation letters or connections
> Goes to a third tier PhD program in a university located in the middle of nowhere
> PhD stipend is not enough, has to work part-time to make ends meet
> Lives in a shitty apartment, sometimes eats at the soup kitchen
> Still works hard and publishes a bunch of papers
> Thinks I'll write my way out of poverty
> Sees a bunch of Type A PhDs in conferences, tries to "network" with them, Type A folks recognize Type B PhDs and stay away from them.
> Defends PhD where the committee says this is excellent work and imminently publishable
> Applies to tenure-track jobs left, right, and center. Gets rejected from everywhere
> Idea of being unemployed with a PhD causes desperation
> Gets a temporary teaching job, gets paid per course basis with no health benefits
> Spends a few years as adjunct with semester to semester renewal of job contract
> Barely survives, has to take up part-time jobs
> Get a one-year postdoc, decides to turn PhD dissertation into a monograph in the hopes it will get tenure-track job
> Postdoc ends, back to temporary adjunct jobs
> Monograph stays incompelete, no time to work on it
> Tries moving out of academia, is considered over-qualified
> Reads social media posts by Type A academics saying PhD is easy, academia is easy
> Thinks, what could I have done better?
Such a privilege to be part of this team tackling a central aspect of behaviour which contributes to non-adherence and medication waste in children and adults @ejlim8@UniofNewcastle@NewcastleHosps@LjmuPharmacy Alice McCloskey and team
Pill aversion is an underexplored issue. The positive impact of an adapted leaflet in adults reflects the success of KidzMed for children. Further work is needed to confirm the association of age and gender with pill aversion. https://t.co/bGQYUGFg89
Pill aversion is an underexplored issue. The positive impact of an adapted leaflet in adults reflects the success of KidzMed for children. Further work is needed to confirm the association of age and gender with pill aversion. https://t.co/bGQYUGFg89
Congratulations to Dr Adam Pattison Rathbone awarded the RPS Barnett Award, recognising his exceptional commitment to mentorship and professional development in pharmacy.
Find out more:
https://t.co/dWGYiR079z #RPSConf25
SHINE Award Winners!!! (sustainable healthcare in Newcastle) you fabulous team! Our behaviour change intervention reduced liquid amoxicillin by 23% , reducing costs by 50%& CO2 emissions by 15% #kidzmed Swallowing pills is better for the planet! 🏆 #paedspharmacy
💤 The AWAKE Study is live on 1/10/25
UK public health study led by:
Adrian Zacher, Dr Phyllis Murphie, Dr Adam Rathbone, Dr Wolfgang Jacquet, Dr Alexander Sweetman, Dr Adam Benjafield, Dr Daniel Perez Chada.
🔗 https://t.co/M495dwTVdC #SleepApnoea#Insomnia#COMISA#AWAKEStudy
Congratulations to Dr Adam Pattison Rathbone on receiving the RPS Barnett Award for 2025, recognising his outstanding dedication to mentorship and professional development in pharmacy.
Read more about Adam's achievements: https://t.co/SeQK5mSleh @AdamPRathbone
Many congratulations to @ph_Amna who becomes Dr Taqi today after defending her thesis exploring asthma services in Kuwait. Thanks to thorough examiners Prof Bandana Saini @Sydney_Uni and Dr Jess Baggaley @UniofNewcastle