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Doctors, Nurses & Patients

How to Survive Medical Practice

David H Dighton

$54.95   $49.15

Paperback

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English
Dr D H Dighton Trading as Loughton Clinic
08 May 2024
Doctors, nurses and patients need to understand one another. With that in mind, this book describes the many characters they can each portray.

In the first chapter, I describe 120 caricatures of doctors and nurses, together with many pertinent and amusing anecdotes, some of which are deadly serious.

In the second chapter, I describe 70 patient types of patient, together with many illustrative anecdotes.

In the third chapter, I explore the interrelationship between patients, doctors and nurses, and how they relate to medical bureaucracy. This is important now that it affects the morbidity and mortality of patients and the working conditions of nurses and doctors in the UK.

When considered as characters, doctors, nurses and patients each play their role in different ways. How each doctor and nurse behaves can affect a patient's quality of life and also their morbidity and mortality.

Doctors and nurses gain an advantage when they understand their patients well, and patients will benefit when they understand the difference, various types of doctor and nurse can make to their life.

Doctors and nurses are not all equally effective when treating people, and patients deserve to know why this is. This book will not only enable doctors and nurses to better understand those they treat, it will also help patients decide who they should allow to treat them.

Some doctors and nurses prefer to treat patients as numbers, others insist on treating patients as sentient human beings. Most specialist doctors now only treat specific problems, whereas once we had general physicians and surgeons capable of much more. Only GPs have kept their ability to treat all-comers.

Although I refer mainly to doctors and nurses, I must acknowledge that many others care for patients. They include pharmacists, hairdressers, carers, counsellors, social workers, paramedics and friends. They should assume that they are all included in my descriptions.

In the 1960s when I first worked as a junior doctor, patients had relationships with doctors that were more formal than today. Doctors then came from rich educated families, and many had experienced the work doctors did as members of their family. Those who practiced medicine had a vocation and were middle-class. Those who became nurses and doctors represented those given to public duty, and not to business. Their aim was to serve. Many would have pursued their vocation, even if their work had been unpaid. Things have changed considerably, but has it been for the better?

The media and medical bureaucrats have made patients aware that every doctor is a potential Dr. Harold Shipman, and every nurse a potential Lucy Letby, until proven otherwise. The result has been that doctors and nurses have changed their approach to patients. Some now see patients as potential litigants. Everything doctors and nurses do now has a medico-legal dimension, with everything that is said or done, recorded and audited for the satisfaction of managers with MBAs and law degrees, many of whom should run baked-bean factories, not medical facilities.

One unfortunate result has been that the focus of some nurses and doctors has had to move from patient care to consider the needs of the corporate management system controlling them. The actions of doctors and nurses has thus changed, and with it the doctor-patient and nurse-patient relationship, but not for the better. Bureaucracy has raised patient expectations, while the services they can access in the UK have become less.

My hope is for patients, doctors and nurses to better understand one another. I have aimed to make the information provided both useful and amusing.
By:  
Imprint:   Dr D H Dighton Trading as Loughton Clinic
Dimensions:   Height: 203mm,  Width: 127mm,  Spine: 14mm
Weight:   263g
ISBN:   9781738520756
ISBN 10:   1738520757
Pages:   262
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Dr. David H. Dighton qualified at the London Hospital Medical College in 1966 with MB and BS (London) degrees. In 1970, after a short time in NHS general practice, he became a British Heart Foundation Fellow in Cardiology at St. George's Hospital Hyde Park Corner, London, working with cardiologists Dr Aubrey Leatham and Dr Alan Harris. In 1973, he became a MRCP(UK), and later became a Lecturer (London University) in Medicine and Cardiology at Charing Cross Hospital, London. In 1980, the Vrije University Hospital in Amsterdam appointed him as Chef de Clinique (Assistant Professor). Having returned to the UK in1982, he worked both in his own private medical practice in Loughton, Essex (The Loughton Clinic, was initially established in 1973 as a medical nursing home), and at the Wellington Hospital, London. In 2000, he started a private diagnostic cardiac centre specialising in heart disease prevention and the early detection of heart and artery disease (The Cardiac Centre Loughton). He retired from practice aged 76-years, having been a medical student and doctor for 58 years. His retirement followed many conflicts with three medical regulators. He had disagreements with them about how medicine should be practised, and who is most qualified to regulate and supervise it. Observing the progressive demise of the NHS in the UK, he remains in disagreement with them; views expressed in his book, The NHS. Our Sick Sacred Cow. 2023.

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