-
- You have access: full
- Open access
Continues
Bulletin of the Royal College of Psychiatrists (1977 - 1988),
Psychiatric Bulletin (1988 - 2009),
The Psychiatrist (2010 - 2013),
The Psychiatric Bulletin (2014 - 2014)
Title history
Title history
- ISSN: 2056-4694 (Print), 2056-4708 (Online)
- Editor: Professor Andrew Forrester Division of Psychological Medicine and Clinical Neurosciences, Cardiff University, UK
- Editorial board
BJPsych Bulletin prioritises research, opinion and informed reflection on the state of psychiatry, management of psychiatric services, and education and training in psychiatry. It provides essential reading and practical value to psychiatrists and anyone involved in the management and provision of mental healthcare.
BJPsych Bulletin is an open access, peer-reviewed journal owned by the Royal College of Psychiatrists. The journal is published bimonthly by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the College. There are no submission or publication charges to authors.
BJPsych Bulletin is not responsible for statements made by contributors and material in BJPsych Bulletin does not necessarily reflect the views of the Editor-in-Chief or the College.
BJPsych Bulletin is an open access, peer-reviewed journal owned by the Royal College of Psychiatrists. The journal is published bimonthly by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the College. There are no submission or publication charges to authors.
BJPsych Bulletin is not responsible for statements made by contributors and material in BJPsych Bulletin does not necessarily reflect the views of the Editor-in-Chief or the College.
Latest articles
Praxis Editorial Award 2022
-
Decolonising our Minds: What UK Psychiatry needs to (un)learn
- 07 November 2024,
- Mental healthcare in the UK is in crisis. As many of us know and have experienced, psychiatry in the UK has formed a bias towards reductive, individualistic...
RCPsych Article of the Month blog
-
What is that creature in the judicial robes thinking?
- 20 November 2024,
- I’ve heard many psychiatrists giving evidence. And, maybe hundreds of experts in multiple cases over a 45 year career as barrister and judge. Some experts are routine – the treating doctor in a road accident claim – while others are indispensable – the psychiatrist testifying that the murder accused did not know the nature and quality of their action....
Facebook