When a patient’s family accuse a doctor of negligence, we end up on a rollercoaster ride. Who is to blame? Is hospital work even bearable any more? And is the public making it worse?

When future historians – or historian-robots – look back at us, what will they determine the last good day to have been a doctor? Post-pandemic, when the wheels finally came off and medical professionals had to strike to call attention to their etiolated pay, chronic underfunding and the NHS’s impending doom? Pre-pandemic? Pre-Thatcher? Or before more ineffable notions crept in, such as the growing distrust of experts, patient entitlement, or the rise of ambulance-chasing lawyers encouraging even the most mildly and unavoidably inconvenienced to sue?

We are a long way from the well-ordered worlds of Dr Welby or Kildare now. Dr Finlay’s casebook would be a groaning, overstuffed thing filled with intractable problems. Even ER, with its gunshot-riddled beds and patients dying from lack of insurance, is starting to look like the representation of a golden age.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

New rules could prevent thousands of refugees from joining close family in UK

More than 17,000 refugees, mainly women and children, could be barred under…

Boris Johnson followed guidance in car without mask, says No 10

Prime minister was photographed without mask inside vehicle taking him home from…

Festival of Thrift: make-do-and-mend fair grows as cost of living bites

Ten-year-old festival in Redcar features swap shops, repair shops and workshops in…

Miss Universe Philippines 2021 pageant