
Two world-leading doctors reveal the true state of modern medicine and how doctors are letting their patients down.
In Hippocrasy, rheumatologist and epidemiologist Rachelle Buchbinder and orthopaedic surgeon Ian Harris argue that the benefits of medical treatments are often wildly overstated and the harms understated. That overtreatment and overdiagnosis are rife. And the medical system is not fit for purpose: designed to deliver health care not health.This powerful expose reveals the tests, drugs and treatments that provide little or no benefit for patients and the inherent problem of a medical system based on treating rather than preventing illness. The book also provides tips to empower patients - do I really need this treatment? What are the risks? Are there simpler, safer options? What happens if I do nothing? Plus solutions to help restructure how medicine is delivered to help doctors live up to their Hippocratic Oath.
'One of the hardest things for a doctor to do ... is nothing. This superb book explains how in medicine and surgery less is often not just more, it's closer to the oath we're all supposed to practise by.' - Norman Swan, award-winning producer and broadcaster of the Health Report and Coronacast'
'This brilliant book offers clear and compelling evidence that we're all at risk from too much medicine. Using the best of science, these two respected doctors blow the whistle on harmful healthcare. Buchbinder and Harris reveal how overdiagnosis, overtreatment and the medicalisation of normal life are major threats to human health. But this brilliant book also brings hope that we can wind back the harm and waste of unnecessary tests and treatments, and focus more on the great benefits medicine has to offer.' - Ray Moynihan, author of Too Much Medicine? and Selling Sickness, Assistant Professor, Bond University'
A timely book from two leading doctors. They present evidence that despite medicine's lip-service to evidence-based medicine, many unnecessary, wasteful and harmful investigations and treatments abound. Increasingly, the healthy are re-defined as having 'predisease' and drawn into questionable investigations and monitoring programmes. The book's core message is that medicine's hubris and a creeping scientism has come to overshadow the doctor's commitment to care for and comfort their patients and, above all, do no harm. It is time to step back from the brink and revisit the founding principles and core values of our profession.' - Trish Greenhalgh OBE, Professor of Primary Care Research, University of Oxford