Hematology is difficult to teach at the medical school level.
The curriculum is necessarily fragmented across different years of
study, and often separated considerably in time. Understanding
hematology requires insight into several distinct aspects: applied
physiology (generally taught early), an understanding of the
essential pathological processes involving the blood are taught
somewhat later (if at all), and the (necessarily) strong laboratory
aspect is generally taught more or less concurrently with other
clinical pathology topics, such as clinical chemistry and
immunology. By the time the student is faced with blood diseases in
the wards, the laboratory/pathological bias is well entrenched. It
is thus difficult for the student to get an integrated view of the
subject. The unspoken assumption, often reinforced by clinical
tutors trained in the traditional perspective, is that blood tests
are all that are required for a diagnosis in blood diseases.
The result has been that clinical expertise in blood diseases is
generally poor. This is reflected in the importance given to the
examination of the hematological system in most student primers.
The hematological system, by and large, is almost completely
neglected. Such relevant features such as pallor, jaundice,
bleeding, splenomegaly and so on are dealt with either in passing
or in relation first to another system or the general examination .
It is almost as though it is taken for granted that the
haematological system cannot be assessed clinically and yet, as
demonstrated later in the book, it is in very many cases impossible
to reach a complete haematological diagnosis without clinical
assessment.
Effective, patient-centred care of hematological patients
requires, as with all other patients, a comprehensive clinical
insight into these disease processes, i.e. an integrated clinical
and pathological approach. Added to these problems is the fact that
the number of laboratory tests has increased explosively, and the
laboratory simply does not have the time to attempt more than a
brief, generalized, and increasingly, an automated interpretation
of the results. Thus the onus of clinical interpretation
necessarily falls more and more on the attending clinician, whose
grounding in clinical haematology is too often inadequate, for the
reasons mentioned.
Hematology is emerging as a clinical specialty in its own right.
The training of hematology physicians today includes extensive
clinical exposure (indeed they are expected to handle the clinical
aspects themselves), while training of medical registrars requires
considerable knowledge of haematology and its reports. Achieving an
integrated approach would be made immeasurably easier by a book
presenting the subject in a fully integrated, clinical way. This
then has been the motivation for this book.
There is no shortage of hematological texts, some of them very
good, and it would be presumptuous and self-indulgent to add to
them without clear justification. However, practically all of the
student-orientated texts tend still to teach hematology from a
formal and largely static laboratory perspective, and the reports
emanating from the laboratory tend to reinforce this. Many of the
Crash Course types of hematology book on the market have (at least)
two major weaknesses: they considerably oversimplify the subject,
contributing to the very mechanistic and almost anti-intellectual
approach to blood diseases and especially to the FBC and Hemostatic
Screen; and they tend to concentrate on primary blood diseases,
whereas in practice most abnormalities of the blood and in the FBC
are secondary to disease outside the system that is to say, they
work primarily from a pathological and not from a clinical
viewpoint. The FBC is one of the most common and valuable tests in
use; it is a relatively expensive test and generally speaking is
poorly interpreted, and the potential wealth of information that
can be gleaned is missed.
The approach described in this book is different from that in
most student texts, and has been very successful in practice,
starting almost from scratch, but omitting many of the basics such
as the details of hematopoiesis, laboratory technology, and so on,
which are hardly relevant to the practising clinician and student
in the wards, and are primarily of interest to the hematologist and
sometimes to the clinical specialist. Considerable emphasis is
given to the clinical history and examination, and the
interpretation of the clinical patterns thus exposed. Hopefully it
will overcome many of the traditional problems experienced in
practical diagnostic haematology.
All the practical essentials are covered, and effectively this
book contains all the information the student will ever need, apart
from details of therapy (until and unless they enter certain
specialties).
The book is restricted to adult haematology, for practical
reasons. While there are considerable areas of similarity between
adult and paediatric haematology, there are also very significant
differences. Thus, the only congenital diseases discussed in this
book are those that can present after childhood and occasionally
those that pose a significant problem in adult practice. Generally
these are discussed only briefly. Often with these the assistance
of a haematologist would have to be sought anyway. Sometimes even
the haematologist may have to further consult someone
sub-specializing in paediatric haematology."
General
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