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An Alarming History Of Famous And Difficult Patients: Amusing Medical Anecdotes From Typhoid Mary To Fdr
Richard Gordon

An Alarming History Of Famous And Difficult Patients: Amusing Medical Anecdotes From Typhoid Mary To Fdr

amusing medical anecdotes from Typhoid Mary to FDR

St Martins Pr (Mar 04, 1997)
9780312150488
| Hardcover
229 pages | 145 x 221 mm | English
$ 20.95 | Value: $ 20.95
Dewey 610 GOR
LC Classification R705 .G647 1997
LC Control No. 96044844

Genre

  • Non-Fiction

Subject

  • Medical / History
  • Medical / Physician & Patient
  • Medicine
  • Medicine - Anecdotes
  • Medicine/ Anecdotes

Plot

When the flesh is weak, the spirit often reacts in an unusual way. Some memorable people have become difficult patients for their doctors, as well as demanding companions for their loved ones, and intolerable colleagues to their contemporaries. The course of history has frequently been altered by their ailments. Presented in the witty and erudite style that is Richard Gordon's hallmark are thirty-one cases of maladies and malingerers, among them: At Waterloo, Napoleon was incommoded with prolapsed piles, hardly the strategical equivalent of Nelson's blind eye at Copenhagen; A mortally ill King Charles II was offered a bracing Julep with forty drops of Spirit of Human Skull, which soon sped him on his way to a more heavenly kingdom; Hitler took laxatives and gave himself camomile enemas to lose weight (a mystical German leader could not be potbellied); and Dissatisfied with his medical advisers, Stalin ordered nine doctors thrown into chains, beaten to a pulp, and ground into powder - a most difficult patient indeed.