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Trust Me, I'm a (Junior) Doctor

par Max Pemberton

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12611218,653 (3.55)10
If you're going to be ill, it's best to avoid the first Wednesday in August. This is the day when junior doctors graduate to their first placements and begin to face having to put into practice what they have spent the last six years learning. Starting on the evening before he begins work as a doctor, this book charts Max Pembertons touching and funny journey through his first year in the NHS. Progressing from youthful idealism to frank bewilderment, Max realises how little his job is about saving people and how much of his time is taken up by signing forms and trying to figure out all the important things no one has explained yet. For example, the crucial question of how to tell whether someone is dead or not. Along the way, Max and his fellow fledgling doctors grapple with the complicated questions of life, love, mental health and how on earth to make time to do your laundry...… (plus d'informations)
  1. 10
    Bodies par Jed Mercurio (Fluffyblue)
    Fluffyblue: Mercurio's book is very similar in style to Pemberton's book.
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» Voir aussi les 10 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 11 (suivant | tout afficher)
Kinda enjoyed listening to this. It can make me chuckle, but only when I drop my irritation at the over-exaggeration which infects each sentence. Author strikes me as a little naive and arrogant railing against the problems in the NHS. However, it does give an insight into what life is like as a junior doctor, and I really enjoyed that. ( )
  jvgravy | Dec 10, 2023 |
Set in a different country and in a different century (!) from my own experience but so much of this was familiar, and conjured up memories that were occasionally so strong they were accompanied by distinctly remembered emotions. The medical and hospital systems in the UK and Australia are very similar and not a lot has changed.

This type of writing has the problem of needing to hit the right tone or it just doesn't work, and Pemberton gets it right most of the time. At the start I thought 'oh oh, this is going to be too flippant in his search for humour, and too self-pitying, but he reigned it in very quickly.

The book is structured as a diary of the working year of a Junior House Officer (six months surgery and six months medicine) in the NHS in Britain. It is a fictionalised account of events that a HO would encounter, but Pemberton does say that everything that happens in the book is based on something that did happen in real life. It is also based on a regular column that Pemberton wrote for the Daily Telegraph newspaper. It's easy to see that he's taken the columns and turned them into a coherent 'story' by adding sections describing incidents and characters from both the hospital and his (almost nonexistent) personal life. In the longer column sections he uses a patient's problem or a specific situation as the basis for a discussion of some of the social, moral and ethical issues involved in medicine and medical care. And also some NHS administrative and 'political' issues. They are a collection of thoughtful and insightful (though obviously somewhat superficial) opinions on the issues. The shorter in between bits show very accurately and honestly what it's like during the first year on the job: frustrating, terrifying, emotionally and physically draining, and quite often also disillusioning. And not just what happens, but how he really feels, both physically and emotionally. That crushing feeling of constant tiredness is one not easily forgotten.

Overall this is a very worthwhile book, both for those with and without any medical background. It's a far cry from the "House of God" type of approach, and while occasionally I felt that the diary entries and the patients and incidents were too obviously concocted just as the framework for the 'lesson', the lessons themselves are worth it. It's also well written, with an underlying humanity and tenderness that shines through. And it is, after all, totally based in reality. ( )
1 voter crimson-tide | Oct 27, 2020 |
There are so many just-qualified, first-time-in-A&E memoirs out there, that to stand out the book has to be really different from the rest of the genre. And this one isn't.

Its enjoyable enough to read, but I've read so many, and this one has no insights unusual anecdotes to relate. I do wonder whether the author remained a doctor or went into writing full-time though, since he wasn't exactly sold on medicine.



( )
  Petra.Xs | Apr 2, 2013 |
My daughter suggested I read this and I'm glad she did. I found it very funny and could visualise so many of the situations.
The trepidation he felt when starting work was the same as we all feel in any type of work, so it was good to know doctors feel the same. ( )
  cookiemo | Jul 30, 2011 |
Hilarious expose of a Junior Doctors first year on the job. ( )
  craigbrown | Mar 15, 2011 |
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If you're going to be ill, it's best to avoid the first Wednesday in August. This is the day when junior doctors graduate to their first placements and begin to face having to put into practice what they have spent the last six years learning. Starting on the evening before he begins work as a doctor, this book charts Max Pembertons touching and funny journey through his first year in the NHS. Progressing from youthful idealism to frank bewilderment, Max realises how little his job is about saving people and how much of his time is taken up by signing forms and trying to figure out all the important things no one has explained yet. For example, the crucial question of how to tell whether someone is dead or not. Along the way, Max and his fellow fledgling doctors grapple with the complicated questions of life, love, mental health and how on earth to make time to do your laundry...

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