• RRP: £14.99
  • You Save: £0.05
FREE Delivery in the UK.
Only 5 left in stock (more on the way).
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon. Gift-wrap available.
Quantity:1
The Rise And Fall Of Mode... has been added to your Basket
+ Â£2.80 UK delivery
Used: Very Good | Details
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comment: Expedited shipping available on this book. The book has been read, but is in excellent condition. Pages are intact and not marred by notes or highlighting. The spine remains undamaged.

Have one to sell?
Flip to back Flip to front
Listen Playing... Paused   You're listening to a sample of the Audible audio edition.
Learn more
See all 2 images

The Rise And Fall Of Modern Medicine Paperback – 3 Nov 2011

4.6 out of 5 stars 36 customer reviews

See all formats and editions Hide other formats and editions
Amazon Price
New from Used from
Kindle Edition
"Please retry"
Paperback
"Please retry"
£14.94
£8.42 £6.17
Want it delivered to France - Mainland by Thursday, 31 Mar.? Order within 17 hrs 15 mins and choose One-Day Delivery at checkout. Details
Note: This item is eligible for click and collect. Details
Pick up your parcel at a time and place that suits you.
  • Choose from over 13,000 locations across the UK
  • Prime members get unlimited deliveries at no additional cost
How to order to an Amazon Pickup Location?
  1. Find your preferred location and add it to your address book
  2. Dispatch to this address when you check out
Learn more
£14.94 FREE Delivery in the UK. Only 5 left in stock (more on the way). Dispatched from and sold by Amazon. Gift-wrap available.

Special Offers and Product Promotions


Frequently Bought Together

  • The Rise And Fall Of Modern Medicine
  • +
  • Medical Ethics: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)
  • +
  • The History of Medicine: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)
Total price: £24.92
Buy the selected items together

Enter your mobile number or email address below and we'll send you a link to download the free Kindle App. Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.

  • Apple
  • Android
  • Windows Phone

To get the free app, enter your e-mail address or mobile phone number.




Product details

  • Paperback: 608 pages
  • Publisher: Abacus (3 Nov. 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0349123756
  • ISBN-13: 978-0349123752
  • Product Dimensions: 12.8 x 3.7 x 19.7 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (36 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 166,940 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Amazon Review

Take this book on holiday--it's a gripping story full of drama and suspense, heroes and villains and, despite charting dark periods when evil triumphed over virtue, has an optimistic message at the end. James Le Fanu has an enviable talent for making medical history fascinating and has produced a story about medicine's rise and fall since the Second World War that will surprise, intrigue and shock you. He claims that in a period of intense innovation between 1940 and 1970 medicine conquered all the major chronic diseases affecting the very young and the very old. With only the much rarer conditions that effect very small numbers of the population in middle life left to address, the revolution dramatically slowed down and innovation almost came to a halt.

Medicine looked subsequently for new frontiers but went up blind alleys, "The New Genetics" and "The Social Theory" of disease. Neither of these new "paradigms" have produced the same level of innovation and are responsible in part for bringing medicine into disrepute.

Despite enormous levels of funding, understanding the "code of life" has not produced any major therapeutic pay-offs, because genetically caused diseases--with only a few exceptions--are rare; genetic engineering and screening proved largely fruitless and genetic therapy made little impact. Theories that social behaviour causes disease, however, has not just been shown to be invalid but has also caused an epidemic itself of health hysteria amongst the well and resulted in blaming the sick for contracting their disease. He regards social theories such as the false idea that high- fat diets cause heart attacks as intellectual scandals that should be apologised for.

Perhaps his most controversial suggestion is that all university epidemiological departments should be closed down in order to prevent any further misinformation from being produced. But Fanu offers criticism of as well as praise for clinical practitioners, and scientists too. He suggests that doctors need to start listening to patients again and interpreting histories instead of ordering barrages of tests if they want medicine to regain respect. And clinical science needs to start trying to discover the biological transmissible agents of the diseases of middle-life if it is to awaken to a new dawn of innovation in the future. --Dorothy Porter --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

Stand by for a brilliant read ... will send your heart palpitating and your blood pressure rising from the start Daily Mail Has the great knack of making even the most complex technical developments exciting and intelligible Observer A major achievement The Tablet Epic and entertaining. The Lancet

See all Product Description

Inside This Book

(Learn More)
Browse and search another edition of this book.
First Sentence
The discovery of penicillin is, predictably, both the first of the twelve definitive moments of the modern therapeutic revolution and the most important. Read the first page
Explore More
Concordance
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
Search inside this book:

Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
Share your thoughts with other customers

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Paperback
Other pundits have proposed the misanthropic ideas of the end of history, of politics, of industry and of class. Now James Le Fanu, the Daily Telegraph's medical columnist, pronounces the end of medicine.
He claims that medicine's golden age from 1945 to 1980 was due to the chance discovery of drugs, advances in clinical science and innovative technology. He believes that medical progress is now exhausted, and laments that the vacuum is being filled by what he thinks are the dead ends of New Genetics, epidemiology and social medicine.
However, it is perhaps bad timing to write off genetics when the Human Genome Project offers such exciting possibilities, and when epidemiology and social medicine have proven the social determinants of so many diseases. He rejects all social and economic explanations of illness. But lifestyle changes - losing weight, improving diet and exercising more - do, for instance, prevent diabetes and promote health and well being (British Medical Journal, 14 July 2001, page 63.)
But he usefully calls for more research into the causes of disease, and rightly rejects idealist explanations. He recounts how doctors used to blame peptic ulcers on 'stress' or 'personality factors', but in 1984, Barry Marshall, a young Australian doctor, identified the bacterium that triggered them. A seven-day course of antibiotics could cure them. The same organism caused two-thirds of stomach cancer cases. In 1986, Thomas Grayston discovered that the bacterium chlamydia caused heart disease. Le Fanu speculates that bacteria as yet undiscovered may cause arthritis, schizophrenia, leukaemia, MS, diabetes and ME.
Read more ›
6 Comments 27 people found this helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Sending feedback...
Thank you for your feedback.
Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again
Report abuse
Format: Paperback
The first 186 pages of Le Fanu's book are a brilliant history of the twelve major moments of post-war medicine. In a gripping narrative Le Fanu manages to present a well-researched, thorough and insightful journey from Penicillin to Heliobacteria - the reader never loses track of where they are thanks to the author's ability to seamlessly weave context and science together.

After page 186 things radically change. Le Fanu now argues for a certain interpretation of modern day medicine - one where statistics and clinical medicine have slowed medical breakthroughs to a halt and are strangling the spontaneity and freedom which (he argues) were the hallmark of the 1940's to 1970's which produced almost all twelve major moments. From here the diatribe begins - whilst he pulls out major themes and changes there is a distinct lack of counter arguments. In fact his evidence is so one-sided that the reader starts to wonder what is not being shown to them.

However it is a convincing argument in places, but not uniformly so. One might question whether the style of argument Le Fanu deploys is little different to the style of argument that the clinical scientists use in reaching their (by now) ridiculed conclusions - the conclusion comes first the evidence second, and counter arguments are ignored in order to present seemingly clear correlations.

Overall, an interesting read. The long 'prologue' is excellent, but the next few hundred pages are frustrating. More balance is required in order to give weight to Le Fanu's arguments.
Comment 10 people found this helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Sending feedback...
Thank you for your feedback.
Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again
Report abuse
By F Henwood TOP 1000 REVIEWER on 29 May 2012
Format: Paperback
As you have probably already guessed by its title, this is a book of two halves.

The first half is the uplifting bit, the history of modern medicine's stunning advances which lasted roughly from the end of the Second World War until the 1970s/1980s when innovations started to peter out, a decline that neither the breakthroughs in mapping the human genome nor the enormous research outlays of pharmaceutical corporations have done anything to reverse.

Before the 1930s, doctors were all but powerless: they could diagnose what was wrong but the cupboard of specific remedies was all but bare. This was to change dramatically over the next few decades. As Le Fanu writes:

`The newly qualified doctor setting up practice in the 1930s had a dozen or so proven remedies ... to treat the multiplicity of different diseases he encountered every day ... Thirty years later, when the same doctor would have been approaching retirement, these dozen remedies had grown to over 2000 ... (p. 234).

In forty years medicine banished a range of maladies that had afflicted humankind for millennia. The victories were not just against the perennial killers of the body such as polio and TB but also of the mind, like schizophrenia. These advances were reinforced and complemented by technological innovations, leading to the wonders of open-heart surgery, organ transplants and hip replacement operations. The alleviation of suffering and distress these advances entailed was truly phenomenal.

What was the basis of this success? Le Fanu confesses that he doesn't know: these discoveries were fortuitous, serendipitous, and accidental. Had Alexander Fleming not been at the right place, at the right time, we might never have discovered penicillin.
Read more ›
Comment 5 people found this helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Sending feedback...
Thank you for your feedback.
Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again
Report abuse

Most Recent Customer Reviews



Feedback