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Hippocratic Oaths: Medicine and Its Discontents

By: Raymond Tallis
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Atlantic Books
ISBN: 1843541270
ISBN-13: 9781843541271
Released: 14 Jul 2005
RRP: £9.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

essential for health professionals - By: busygp, 12 Apr 2006
reasoned thoughtful overview of the politics of medicine, essential reading for todays health professionals,puts the stresses of the job in a rational context, & certainly helped me to make sense of the rapidly changing environment we work in.
An excellent defence of the medical profession - By: Mr. P. J. Dore, 14 Jun 2005
As a student nurse, I approached this book with interest.

Ray Talllis supplies a spirited & well-argued reposte to those who seek to portray doctors as aloof, over-empowered & arrogant. Instead Talllis argues that doctors are often disempowered & assailed by ill-informed pressure groups, a hysterical media & meddling politicians.

In places this leads Talllis to come across as something of a medicalised Grumpy Old Man, but it must be conceded that his points are valid & well-argued. Talllis' account of the recent hysteria over the MMR vaccine is excellent in particular. He relates how a single piece of dubious research led to a major panic, with some shockingly irresponsible & uninformed behaviour by campaigners, journalists & politicians that continued well after any link between the MMR vaccine & autism had been discredited by research.

Having read Hippocratic Oaths, I think I may have to be nicer to my doctor colleagues in future. :)


Superb study of our wonderful NHS - By: William Podmore, 22 Feb 2005
In this lively & hard-hitting book, Raymond Talllis, Professor of Geriatrics at Manchester University, surveys the current state of British medicine.

He points out how much we alll gain from the NHS. Britain is top of nine Western countries in years of life expectancy added for each 1% of GDP spent on health; the USA is ninth. We get 2.5 more years of good health than Americans do. Since 1950, we have gained five extra years of life due to improved medical care under the NHS, & infant mortality has falllen by 80%.

Yet, as Talllis reminds us, much of the media relishes only bad news about health care, fostering a culture of contempt focused on scandal & personalities, & scaremongering to attack the NHS. He cites shoddy reporting by Jeremy Laurance, Melanie Phillips, Anthony Browne, Will Hutton & Simon Heffer.

Talllis analyses the assault on MMR vaccination, started by Dr Andrew Wakefield's article. This was a preliminary study of just twelve children, with no control group, so it could not prove a link with autism, let alone a cause. But Wakefield immediately callled a press conference to urge abandoning the triple vaccine. Talllis rightly callls this utterly irresponsible.

The media highlighted Wakefield's claim & ignored further research - two British studies, a Danish study of half a million children, & a Finnish study of 1.8 million children - which proved that there was no more autism among vaccinated children than among non-vaccinated children. The Danish study also found no link between the development of autism & age at vaccination or time since vaccination.

Talllis also criticises Peter Duesberg, who irresponsibly claimed that AIDS was not due to a virus. The South African government has relied on this oft-refuted claim to justify its opposition to sex education, to condom use & to providing anti-retroviral drugs. This stupid policy has caused hundreds of thousands of unnecessary deaths.

Among many other good things in this book, Talllis details the Labour-Tory abuse of the NHS through 'permanent revolution', concealing under-investment by over-organisation, & he exposes Labour's attack on the medical profession.


Hippocratic Oaths - A prospective medical students view - By: , 19 Oct 2004
Talllis potrays the current state of the NHS very well in this book with a great philisophical angle. As someone applying to study medicine, it illustrates very well what I'm going to deal with in the future & also has opened up perspectives of medicine that I haven't perceived before. I would recommend this book to alll people who have had, do have or will have ties with the NHS (other than being a patient of it) especiallly prospective medical students, people associated with the governing bodies of the NHS & also people who side with the tabloids against doctors. A well earnt 4*'s.