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Druin Burch
ISBN: 9781845951504
Format: Paperback
Publisher:Vintage
Also available as an eBook
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Argues that the real heroes of medicine are the men and women who demonstrated the vital importance of controlled testing over the 'intuition' of doctors and encourages us to ask more questions about the new breed of wonder drugs, and to press governments against handing control of our medicines, and our lives, to global drug companies.
For years patients have placed their trust in doctors and the drugs they prescribe. Yet as Druin Burch's thought-provoking history of medicine demonstrates our trust has often been misplaced. Only with the development of antibiotics after the Second World War did doctors begin to cure more than they killed but even in this supposedly advanced age patients feel victim to tragedies such as the Thalidomide scandal. Burch argues that the real heroes of medicine are the men and women who demonstrated the vital importance of controlled testing over the 'intuition' of doctors and encourages us to ask more questions about the new breed of wonder drugs, to question our own doctors and to press governments against handing control of our medicines, and our lives, to global drug companies. His book is both alarming and optimistic, and is essential reading.
| ISBN | 1845951506 | | Pages | 336 | | ISBN13 | 9781845951504 (What's this?) | | Weight (grammes) | 230 | | Publisher | Vintage | | Published in | London | | Imprint | Vintage | | Height (mm) | 198 | | Format | Paperback | | Width (mm) | 130 | | Publication date | 07 Jan 2010 | | Spine width (mm) | 21 | | DEWEY | 610.9 | | Academic level | General | | DEWEY edition | DC22 | |
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Burch leads us through an array of shocking and surprising medical practices Financial Times For all the wizardry of modern medicine, with its bionic limbs and targeted drugs, doctors still cannot assume they have all the answers. This book offers a valuable inoculation against complacency New Scientist Taking The Medicine is both an assault on the myths of the infallible doctor and a history of pharmacology - the search for the one, true treatment... Burch makes a compelling case Sunday Telegraph. Each chapter is a self-contained pleasure to read, like mini-fables on the perils of medicine Sunday Times Burch approaches his task with vigour and pace, exploring the therapeutic failures of doctors over the ages...there is much of interest as the story unfolds Irish Times A fascinating history of the development of clinical trials and the thinking behind them Literary Review  Be the first to write a customer review
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