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This book, This Has All Been Said Before, is myself welcoming the
reader to my therapy. I used to suffer from depression and anxiety,
now I enjoy every moment of it at least I do on the better days.
This condition, this gift that I have come to understand that I
have given to myself, has challenged me to have to fully realize
and appreciate to my own satisfaction, who we are as I discovered
in fact who I am. The meaning of life can be absolute or it can be
subjective. Both matter. Life, in every single form matters, simply
because in the abscence of life expressing itself, there is
nothing. Subjectively the meaning of life is whatever we as an
individual attach to it, and it is from this perspective, the
singular perspective each and every human provides God, that God
has allowed God to completely 'know' God. Just as my depression was
the gift I, my soul, has given myself, Phil Hammond, as the means
through which I would view and explore creation this time in this
space, God has given us to Godself, to do the same, explore
creation on God's behalf. Thank you and I trust you will enjoy my
explanation of everything.
The essential book on how not to be a doctor - and how to be a
better one. Drawn from his popular medical columns over the years,
John Launer shares fifty of his best-loved essays, covering topics
from essentials skills they don't teach you in medical school to
his poignant account of being a patient himself as he received
treatment for a life-threatening illness. Taken together, the
stories make the case that being a doctor should mean drawing on
every aspect of yourself, your interests and your experiences no
matter how remote they seem from the medical task at hand. How Not
to Be a Doctor combines humour, candour and the human touch to
inform and entertain readers on both ends of the stethoscope.
***PRAISE FOR HOW NOT TO BE A DOCTOR*** 'An essential read... It is
a gem.' Dr. Fiona Moss, CBE, Dean of the Royal Society of Medicine
'This collection is warm, wise, generous, thoughtful and
thought-provoking... imbued with a moving humanity which offers
inspiration and reassurance in equal measure.' Dr. Deborah Bowman,
MBE, BBC Broadcaster and Professor of Medical Ethics and Law 'Witty
and wise. Shows how important it is that doctors are allowed to be
human.' Kit Wharton, author of Emergency Admissions: Memoirs of an
Ambulance Driver 'An all-round excellent book, which would appeal
to a wide range of healthcare professionals and students... a
light-hearted way of looking at serious subjects.' BMA Panel of
Judges 'I raced through this book, laughing, nodding, highlighting
and then read some favourite bits again. Every chapter has a gem of
wisdom as well as being so very elegantly written and
entertaining.' Jenny Rogers, Co-Author of Coaching for Health
'Bursting with wonder and wisdom, this seductively readable book
imparts courage and joy in equal measure.' Dr. Iona Heath, CBE.
Former President, Royal College of General Practitioners and author
of The Mystery of General Practice 'Gets to the heart and soul of
current medical practice. Written by a doctor, but incorporates
life experience and wisdom, making it an easy, thought provoking
read.' Professor Jane Dacre, President of the Royal College of
Physicians
Throughout the coronavirus crisis, the fortnightly columns of
Private Eye's Medical Correspondent 'MD', aka NHS doctor Phil
Hammond, have been required reading. Astute, compassionate and
scientifically literate, 'MD' has guided Eye readers through each
stage of the pandemic, from every perspective: global and national;
political and personal. In an updated collection of his
much-praised columns, and with new wisdom gleaned from charting the
failures and triumphs in the continuing battle with the SARS-CoV-2
virus, he sets out what went wrong, what went right - and what
needs to happen now as new variants emerge and the UK public looks
forward to a long-awaited official government public inquiry.
What questions would you ask a doctor at a comedy gig?...Is it
healthy to sleep with a pet? What are the side effects of
budgie-smuggling? Is horse riding riskier that ecstasy? Do love
eggs need to be fitted? Do unlucky beds exist? Do doctors ever
pretend to hear noises with a stethoscope? Should I hand-wash my
merkin? Do you need three hands to put a condom on properly? Is it
safe to fall asleep with a penis enlarger on? What should I do if
someone dies on me during sex? GP and comedian Phil Hammond is
easier to see on stage than in the surgery, but he always leaves
time for questions. Here are 250 of life's quirkiest queries,
lovingly collected from audiences across the UK. Some people put a
hand straight up, others prefer a shy drop into Dr Phil's secret
sack. Open wide for the finest answers to the most bizarre
questions, ranging from tongue in cheek to absolutely filthy...yet
surprisingly useful.
NEW UPDATED EDITION In this committed and compassionate book, Phil
Hammond - a doctor, journalist, campaigner and patient - argues for
a bidet revolution in the NHS - from the bottom up, with patients
leading the charge. What we can do for ourselves to live well often
far outweighs what modern medicine and the NHS can do for us. And
when we do need to use the NHS, getting involved, speaking up and
sharing our expertise can improve not just our care, but the care
of others. We won't always succeed, but we can learn from failure
as we try to get the best care possible in our precious and
precarious health service. Dr Phil shares his own experiences of
working in and investigating the NHS for 30 years, and combines it
with the testimony and tactics of inspirational patients and
carers. Some have survived and thrived in the NHS, some are
planning a gentle death at home, and some have suffered greatly but
are determined to improve the NHS so others don't have to.
This book, This Has All Been Said Before, is myself welcoming the
reader to my therapy. I used to suffer from depression and anxiety,
now I enjoy every moment of it at least I do on the better days.
This condition, this gift that I have come to understand that I
have given to myself, has challenged me to have to fully realize
and appreciate to my own satisfaction, who we are as I discovered
in fact who I am. The meaning of life can be absolute or it can be
subjective. Both matter. Life, in every single form matters, simply
because in the abscence of life expressing itself, there is
nothing. Subjectively the meaning of life is whatever we as an
individual attach to it, and it is from this perspective, the
singular perspective each and every human provides God, that God
has allowed God to completely 'know' God. Just as my depression was
the gift I, my soul, has given myself, Phil Hammond, as the means
through which I would view and explore creation this time in this
space, God has given us to Godself, to do the same, explore
creation on God's behalf. Thank you and I trust you will enjoy my
explanation of everything.
This is a hilarious new book by the best-selling author of
"Medicine Balls".Dr Phil has been a doctor and whistleblower for
twenty one years, and still hasn't been struck off. As "Private
Eye's" medical correspondent and presenter of BBC's "Trust Me, I'm
a Doctor", he's exposed too many scandals and upset too many
surgeons. Now aged 46, with varifocals, a swelling prostate and a
black bit on his toe that could be a melanoma, he's paranoid about
becoming a patient. What will the bastards do to me?This irreverent
and confrontational romp through Dr Phil's alleged career starts
off with scary scandals but ends up with some surprisingly useful
tips on how to avoid doctors if you can and use them if you
can't.Trust Me, I'm (Still) a Doctor is one book you can't afford
not to read!
This is the popular best-seller in a revised and updated new
edition. The world is full of TV doctors, but only Dr Phil has
appeared on "Have I Got News For You" seven times and "Coutdown"
nineteen times, a true mark of greatness (whatever Lord Winston
says). He is also Private Eye's medical correspondent and possibly
the only comic to have appeared at a Public Inquiry. Dr Phil (46,
Capricorn) has worked in the NHS for twenty years but only used it
twice. He takes no drugs (apart from Australian Shiraz) and has
never knowingly been Rolfed. So how does he remain so healthy? And
what sort of Doctor is he? Here, at last, are transcripts of his
most life-enhancing consultations and comedy, including 89 Minutes
to Save the NHS.
With bird flu a very present threat, this is a timely and important
look at the impact of quiet killers through the ages. In 1658
Oliver Cromwell, having brought a king to execution, and risen to
power, died from malaria when he refused to take the Devil?s Bark,
the quinine compound produced in a Catholic colony, which could
have cured him. Like many other infectious diseases, malaria was
endemic in Britain until the twentieth century, when it and other
diseases seemed to be vanquished by science. Yet now the trend for
those diseases seems to be reversing: some infectious agents are
becoming resistant to nearly all available antibiotics; differences
in travel and social behaviour spread infections more widely; and,
with changes in climate, diseases are either being described for
the first time, or appearing in previously unaffected areas. But do
we need some deadly diseases to stimulate our immunity? Has
humankind depended on infection to drive evolution? How vulnerable
are we now? Writer and infectious diseases specialist Dr Robert
Baker takes a fascinating look at the history of deadly diseases,
and discusses their future impact in a changing world.
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