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How I Ruined Medicine

For 37 years Dr Phil Hammond worked in the NHS and exposed its darkest secrets, through Private Eye, on stage and on screen. But now he's having a crisis. What damage did he do?

Dr Phil Hammond says, "Doctoring used to be like Downing Street. Posh unaccountable alcoholics working silly hours, cocking up, covering up and laughing it off in the mess. Above all, it was fun. Then I broke ranks and ruined it. For 37 years I worked in the NHS and exposed its darkest secrets, through Private Eye, on stage and on screen - for example, ±«Óãtv2's Trust Me, I'm a Doctor.

I broke a story of babies dying after heart surgery in Bristol which became the subject of the largest public inquiry in British history. I gave evidence and argued that doctors could not be trusted to regulate themselves in secret, and we needed absolute transparency of data, so patients could see, choose and access the treatments they deserved. Only this could improve the NHS. In 2001, the Inquiry made 198 recommendations to ensure the NHS would embed quality, safety and transparency at its heart.

My campaigning and aggressive exposure helped spawn an army of regulators, lawyers and aggressively informed patients demanding excellent care in a collapsing service. Instead of fixing the NHS, I appear to have made it worse. The NHS now has 133,000 vacancies, over seven million waiting for treatment and too many doctors are retiring early or jumping ship to Australia. There is a mental health crisis among staff who suffer the moral injuries of being unable to deliver a decent standard of care, yet are punished if they speak out.

Using archive from the ±«Óãtv, Private Eye, newspapers, my seven books, I take a mea culpa trip around the NHS to try to better understand the mess it's in."

Includes interviews with:
Chancellor of the Exchequer, Jeremy Hunt MP
Bafta winning writer and former doctor, Adam Kay
Dame Clare Gerada, President of the Royal Society of GPs
Brain surgeon and author, Henry Marsh

Producer: David Morley
A Perfectly Normal production for ±«Óãtv Radio 4

Available now

57 minutes

Last on

Fri 20 Oct 2023 21:00

Broadcasts

  • Sat 8 Jul 2023 20:00
  • Fri 14 Jul 2023 12:04
  • Fri 20 Oct 2023 21:00