Being a Doctor: Understanding Medical Practice is an insightful and informed
account of what it is like to be a doctor. Based on many years of teaching
family physicians, Wilson and Cunningham argue that being a doctor is much more
than simply knowing biomedical facts and having good clinical skills.
‘Perhaps doctors have never been under so much pressure: advances in
biomedical sciences have increased clinical expectations tenfold. This book aims to help doctors get back to
the reasons why they signed up in the first place to be a health professional.’
– Hamish Wilson
Being a Doctor explores principles and assumptions of modern medicine seldom taught in
medical school but which are integral to the day-to-day working life of health
professionals. Starting with the meaning of suffering and how the ‘science’ of
medicine has evolved, the book examines the world of the patient, the world of
the doctor and how these worlds intersect. Wilson and Cunningham use clinical
stories to provide a fresh perspective on the work and role of the modern
doctor.
Major
challenges facing physicians include the doctor–patient relationship, the
‘heartsink’ experience, and unwell patients for whom no disease can be found.
Caring for such patients can leave clinicians feeling overwhelmed. This book is
an antidote – an invaluable tool for doctors in practice, students and doctors
in training. Being a
Doctor provides
valuable insight for all medical professionals and is an enlightening read for
patients and clinicians alike.
In
the words of Glenn Colquhoun, this book is ‘good medicine’.
By Hamish
Wilson & Wayne Cunningham
Foreword
by Glenn Colquhoun
Otago University Press
Paperback,
245 x 170 mm, 276 pp approx, two-colour
ISBN
978 1 877578 36 6, $35
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