Richard Smith: The most devastating critique of medicine since Medical Nemesis by Ivan Illich in 1975

From a golden age to the age of disappointment
Unlike Illich, who believed that modern medicine counterproductively created sickness, O’Mahony does see what he calls a golden age of medicine that began after the Second World War with the appearance of antibiotics, vaccines, a swathe of effective drugs, surgical innovations, better anaesthetics, and universal health coverage for most of those in rich countries. It ended in the late 1970s, meaning that O’Mahony, who graduated in 1983 and is still practising, enjoyed little of the golden age. We are now “in the age of unmet and unrealistic expectations, the age of disappointment.”
Unlike Illich, who believed that modern medicine counterproductively created sickness, O’Mahony does see what he calls a golden age of medicine that began after the Second World War with the appearance of antibiotics, vaccines, a swathe of effective drugs, surgical innovations, better anaesthetics, and universal health coverage for most of those in rich countries. It ended in the late 1970s, meaning that O’Mahony, who graduated in 1983 and is still practising, enjoyed little of the golden age. We are now “in the age of unmet and unrealistic expectations, the age of disappointment.”
Golden ages are always in the past or the future and never now (except perhaps for television), but many older people who remember when people died of polio, diphtheria, and tuberculosis would agree that a golden age did begin around the birth of the NHS in 1948; many older doctors also see that time as a golden age when there was more curing of diseases, patients were mostly grateful and respectful, and doctors had clearer roles and more power and status.
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