What seems to be the problem? : a doctor's story about courage, compasion, and a new way to care /
by Marshall-Andrews, Laura.
Material type: BookPublisher: London : HQ, 2022Description: 258 pages ; 23 cm.ISBN: 9780008445027 (hbk.) :; 0008445028 (hbk.) :.Classification number: 610.92 MARSubject(s): Marshall-Andrews, Laura | Great Britain. National Health Service | Medical care -- Great Britain | Health and Fitness | Health and Wellbeing | Autobiography: science, technology & medicine | True stories: general | Medicine: general issues | Medical profession | General practiceSummary: All doctors have the opportunity of peering deep into the inner lives of their patients. In these stories, award-winning GP, Laura Marshall-Andrews, recounts those moments in all their bizarre, comic and sometimes heart-wrenching beauty. In so doing she fearlessly reveals the struggles of her profession and details how our health system has been broken by fragmentation, over-regulation and the blind dogma of 'Evidence Based Medicine'. She shows how the factory-belt system has little space to allow or acknowledge the complexity of an individual's life and she argues the need to value each patient's story as being the key to their heath. These stories demonstrate how humanity, belief and love, unquantifiable and beyond the reach of mass trial and hard evidence, are much more powerful motivators for good care and it is these that should be at the heart of all health-care decisions.Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Book - Adult Hardback | Formby Library | Adult Non-Fiction | 610.92 MAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 003107542X |
Subtitle misspelled and should read: a doctor's story about courage, compassion, and a new way to care.
All doctors have the opportunity of peering deep into the inner lives of their patients. In these stories, award-winning GP, Laura Marshall-Andrews, recounts those moments in all their bizarre, comic and sometimes heart-wrenching beauty. In so doing she fearlessly reveals the struggles of her profession and details how our health system has been broken by fragmentation, over-regulation and the blind dogma of 'Evidence Based Medicine'. She shows how the factory-belt system has little space to allow or acknowledge the complexity of an individual's life and she argues the need to value each patient's story as being the key to their heath. These stories demonstrate how humanity, belief and love, unquantifiable and beyond the reach of mass trial and hard evidence, are much more powerful motivators for good care and it is these that should be at the heart of all health-care decisions.
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