Description
In this final volume of his best-selling 'Inner' trilogy, Roger Neighbour explores the relationship between a doctor's professional and private selves. He suggests that the mind of every doctor retains an untrained 'ordinary human being' part - their Inner Physician - which makes an important, though often neglected, contribution to medical practice. This 'Inner Physician', which he also describes as the 'amateur within' or the 'expert minus the expertise', plays a major role in diagnosis and treatment, and is the chief source of insight, empathy and clinical acumen. Roger shows that skilled use of the Inner Physician is one thing that distinguishes the generalist from the specialist.
Table of Contents
1. Beginner's mind. 2. A backwards glance. 3. Inchworms and also-rans. 4. The medical gaze. 5. The illness catastrophe. 6. The case for big picture medicine. 7. 'What's the matter?'. 8. As long as you think of it. 9. Crichton's switch. 10. Through Johari's window. 11. The Greeks had a word for it. 12. In praise of innersense.