In his latest blog Ben reviews GP Judith Harvey’s latest book “Perspectives: A GP reflects on medical practice and, well, just about everything…”
There are not many non-autobiographical books where you feel like you get to know the author, but Perspectives by Judith Harvey is definitely one. There is something compelling about getting inside the mind of a doctor, not just as a doctor but as a person, and getting a sense of how they see the world.
Judith Harvey is a GP, a patient, a charity founder, and a unique individual. She is also a very talented writer. “Perspectives” is a collection of articles she has written over a 10 year period. Her articles have been published each week in the National Association of Sessional GPs newsletter, as well as other GP publications. While they were written primarily for GPs, I am not a GP and I still found them highly accessible, as well as insightful, stimulating and challenging at the same time.
Her writing is characterised by her honesty. In “It’s a knockout!” she describes her own experience of having concussion, of how it impacted her ability to think clearly, to work effectively and to sleep properly. In “Sleeping with the patient” we find out why she spent the night sharing a bed with one of her patients. In “Giving up… or stopping?” she shares what the prospect of retiring from clinical practice is like in real time.
As the book progresses you start to sense her underlying frustration with the system, borne out of a deep concern about health inequalities. In many ways, Judith was always ahead of her time: a proud portfolio GP when the voice was not as loud as it is today; writing about the impact of employment on health as a medical student and being summoned to the Dean to be reminded she wasn’t training to become a social worker; to advocating walking (for staff and patients) as a route into cutting the NHS budget back in 2009, well before the social prescribers had moved into town. Her passion for learning from others systems is clear (Judith founded Cuba Medical Link, a registered charity which enabled medical students to travel to Cuba for their electives), as is her frustration that we are not learning more from the system that exports doctors and achieves some of the best outcomes at a fraction of the cost of systems we frequently refer to.
When it comes to dealing with difficult issues, no stone is left unturned. She tackles self-prescribing by doctors (an issue rarely considered by non-clinicians), whether placebos can (and should) be morally prescribed, and the impact discussing an elderly patient’s driving ability can have on the doctor-patient relationship. She talks about the problems of evidence based medicine, about the social pressure put on potential organ donors, and questions whether it is ethical to provide a new face to a healthy person whose face is damaged when the price is premature death.
Ultimately, what I enjoyed most was the sense I was starting to get to know Judith as a person, as someone who loves travel and film festivals and the paintings of Goya, as someone who embraces all of life, rather than choosing to be defined by her profession or one particular aspect of it, and as someone prepared to share some of her innermost thoughts so that we, the readers, can better understand the points she is making, simply because she cares.
Maybe the book would have been even better if it had included more of a biography at the beginning or end. The only thing missing for me was a more direct insight into Judith’s life, into where she has been and what she has done, as a canvas to enrich the colour of the articles.
That said, this book is much more than “a GP reflecting on medical practice and, well, just about everything” as it says on the front cover, which hopelessly undersells it. It is a rare insight into what the world looks like through the lens of someone who is both a GP and a fascinating individual, and as someone who had never previously read any of her articles, I found it captivating.
Judith’s book can be purchased via Amazon here. We will be talking to Judith about her life and career in a future episode of the General Practice Podcast
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