UWOMJ Volume 10 No 3 1940

Page 1

The University of Western Ontario

MEDICAL JOURNAL VOLUME 10

NUMBER 3

Pre.. and Post-Operative Management in Biliary Surgery By FRANK RIGGALL, M.A., M.D. , C.M. , F.R.C.P. (Edin.) ,

M.R.C.S. (Eng.) , L.R.C.P. (Lond.) THIS material is presented from a practical point of view, from the field of our actual practice. Our group is very fortunate in that, far from the madding crowd, we operate a small clinic and hospital under the same roof. All our working days are spent only a little distance away from our patients. We have to live with them during our waking hours and we have an opportunity to observe them, which has proved valuable. Before dealing with the treatment of biliary surgery in particular, it would be well to deal with the subject of treatment in general. When we attend meetings and read the literature we occasionally get the idea that we must be creatures apart in the world of medicine. No one else seems to have trouble in persuading patients that they should be operated upon! No one else seem to have trouble in cutting the therapeutic cloak to the patient' financial cloth ! We listen and read and wonder wl>o pays the bill for all the fanciful measures in treatment and we wonder most of all where those patients come from who have money to pay for all the things recommended and yet have enough money left to pay the surgeon his reasonable fee. In our bitter experience those words "Spare no expense," so frequently heard and so glibly uttered, have taught us to find out at once whose expense is being talked of because it has usually been ours in the end.

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These difficulties, and the necessity of securing adequate results, have made us sift the wheat from the chaff in an endeavour to arrive at a rational and effective system of treatment. It is necessary that doctors concentrate upon diagnosis because without diagnosis there can be no rational treatment but we should not forget that to the patient treatment is the most important item and it is usually by our treatment results that we are judged. Without adequate treatment the patient thinks that diagnosis is but "sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal, and you may have the gift of prophecy in a disease and understand all its ( Paper read at Mt. Carmel Mercy H ospital Clinic Day, Detroit, Mich., J an. 31, 1940) 93


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