Published in 2022, this anthology of reminiscences and reflections by members of the Senior Fellows Club of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh tells, in 10-themed chapters, of young medical experiences, of adventures abroad, of diagnoses missed and clever ones made, and of fascinating contributions to research . . . and more.

There is much humour, a lot of instruction and intriguing snippets of information, like how the Profumo affair affected hospital staff; the graphic pen-picture of one author’s role model, a distinguished London gynaecologist who drove a small sports car, ‘a long cigarette holder clamped between her teeth and a smile which rarely extended to her eyes’; and the scarcely believable fact that the post Great War Peace Treaty of Versailles included international agreement on the acoustic definition of tuning note A!

We learn from doctors’ hobbies that the bird song of the willow warbler ‘is almost operatic, like a downward-flowing aria’, while its contact call ‘is simpler, a sweet, upwardly inflected, single note’; that serious book-collectors don’t buy books to read; and that magnolias are ancient plants from the dinosaur era that evolved before bees and were probably then pollinated by beetles. We could, however, have done without hearing about an unholy form of treatment for haemorrhoids!

The whole is interlaced with delightful poems and illustrated. Readers will be entertained.

It is good to be publishing this anthology during the 30th anniversary year of the Senior Fellows Club’s inauguration in 1992.

Introduction

When COVID-19 struck the UK in March 2020 and ‘lockdown’ followed, the members of the Senior Fellows Club at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh looked on in horror as this new ‘black death’ took its toll and many people in our age group were denied access to intensive care or proper protection in care homes. Most of us were, by definition, vulnerable and went into isolation. We learned new ways of living: booking online to have shopping, newspapers and drugs delivered or, more likely, got our computer-savvy grandchildren to do this.

Our last club meeting proved to be the annual Guest Lunch and Arts, Crafts & Collectors Exhibition on 2 March. Little did we expect that we would not meet in the flesh again for nearly another two years. But we became adept at ‘zooming’ and, later that year, our monthly talks resumed via Webex, thanks to the College’s IT department and Peter Falconer in particular. However, just before then, Professor Anthony Seaton, always full of good ideas – as evident in his contributions to this book – suggested we might increase our COVID-restricted interactions by writing ‘essays’ and circulating them around. A trickle ensued, which he, then both of us, began editing. Further invites to write were sent out in early 2021 and the number of ‘essays’ multiplied, some authors enthusiastically writing several. It struck me that if enough articles were forthcoming, they might make an anthology, an interesting themed compilation of reminiscences and a legacy of our COVID-induced estrangement.

Members were asked to consider any topic. There were obvious medical themes: why I became a doctor; what attracted me to my specialty; my most remarkable or difficult patient; a diagnostic dilemma; a medical near-miss disaster; my medical hero or role model – and so on.  Or the subject could be non-medical. It was emphasised that readers would want to get to know something of the author, his or her thoughts and reflections, hopes and disappointments, contributions, failures and fallibilities. Prose or poetry, story, reminiscence, bee-in-the-bonnet or polemic - all were welcomed. This compilation in ten themed chapters substantially fulfils these objectives and readers should find much of interest. 

Contributions range from memories of young doctor and student days, of sitting the dreaded ‘Membership’ exam, of adventures abroad, and of unusual cases encountered over the years, to research, careers and hobbies. A number of items would have fitted into more than one theme and others have been assigned to ‘A Miscellaneous Medley’. The book ends with reflections on medicine and medical life, some serious, some not so serious. Every submission has been included except two that were more suited to publication elsewhere and two for which permission to publish was not given. In its compilation of the thoughts and memories of a cohort of retired doctors, this anthology is unusual

There is much information, such as that 35% of medical outpatients lack a clear diagnosis for their symptoms; that the UK hospital autopsy rate has fallen from around 40-50% in the 1960s to about 1% now; and that when Professor Ian Donald, who pioneered the use of ultrasound in obstetrics, first proposed the idea to an obstetric audience his talk was greeted with such profound scepticism that, he said: “I knew I was onto something”! There is humour and intriguing snippets, like how the Profumo affair affected hospital staff; the graphic pen-picture of one author’s role model, a distinguished London gynaecologist who drove a small sports car, ‘a long cigarette holder clamped between her teeth and a smile which rarely extended to her eyes’; and the scarcely believable fact that the post Great War Peace Treaty of Versailles included international agreement on the acoustic definition of tuning note A! We learn from doctors’ hobbies that the bird song of the willow warbler ‘is almost operatic, like a downward-flowing aria’, while its contact call ‘is simpler, a sweet, upwardly inflected, single note’; that serious book-collectors don’t buy books to read; and that magnolias are ancient plants from the dinosaur era that evolved before bees and were probably then pollinated by beetles. We could, however, have done without hearing about an unholy form of treatment for haemorrhoids! The whole is interlaced with delightful poems and illustrated. It is hoped readers will be entertained.

It is good to be publishing this anthology during the 30th anniversary year of the club’s inauguration in 1992. Since then, membership has more than doubled from 81 to 194 and is likely to grow further as it has been decided this year to offer free membership to all retired fellows of the College, worldwide. Thirty years on, the club has developed into a very active society and details of its activities can be found on its extensive website by Googling ‘Senior Fellows Club’. Members also have a private password to access audio-visual recordings of the club’s talks, to the ‘essays’, to an online forum and to the club’s directory of members. We are particularly proud of prizes we give to young doctors in training for their research publications in the College Journal. This keeps us both educated and in touch with the kind of young doctors we once were. It is hoped they will enjoy the book.

When in 1992 the formation of a senior fellows’ club was first mooted, there was an overwhelming positive response from retired local fellows, though one former College President wrote that he could think of nothing worse than getting together with a lot of old duffers! Old, or older, we may be – duffers, never.

Stefan Slater
July, 2022

Content

Medical Lives: Memories and Musings ,

Reflections and reminiscences by members of the Senior Fellows Club of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh

Compiled by Dr Stefan Slater

97 themed articles and 11 interlaced poems from 45 authors

CONTENTS

Foreword

 

1

Acknowledgements

 

3

Introduction

 

4

 

Chapter 1 As Young Hospital Doctors and Students

Frying tonight

Roger Wild

9

But Sister, I did exactly as you said…

John Hunter

11

Inspiration

Petros Perros

12

Another time, another world

Malcolm Merrick

18

The class of 2021

Kirsty Muirhead

22

A crime scene?

Brian Pentland

25

The Kingdom of Fife

Allan Stevenson

26

A very small rebellion

Alastair Blair

31

The things we did

Anthony Seaton

33

A junior doctor in London in the 1960s

Roger Kellett

36

It might turn out differently now

Alastair Blair

39

Interviews

Anthony Seaton

40

It was acceptable in the eighties

Allan Stevenson

42

 

Chapter 2 The Dreaded Membership Exam

A day out in London...

Niall Finlayson

48

The ‘Membership’ – Recollections

Robert Finnie

51

Tales from the Edinburgh Membership...

David Boyd

54

Making good in the bad old days

Anthony Seaton

57

Passing and failing the 'Membership'

Stefan Slater

61

Examinations

Philip Welsby

63

 

Chapter 3 Adventures Abroad

Four concerts

David Macfadyen

70

Home thoughts from abroad

Iain Macintyre

76

A medical wife in Kenya

Judith Steel

83

A physician’s experience of obstetrics

David Boyd

86

Aden - 1962-3

James Gray

89

The Nairobi-Mombasa Railway, 1982

Brian Frier

97

Karma

David Macfadyen

100

All at sea

Roger Smith

103

My moments with the countess

David Boyd

106

Ex Africa semper aliquid novi

Judith &

108

 

Michael Steel

 

 

Chapter 4 Unusual Clinical Encounters & Unforgettable Patients

A family I will not forget

Ron Fergusson

118

Two memorable domiciliary visits

Stefan Slater

121

The story of Beatrix

Mhairi MacDonald

123

Ramifications of a common condition

Margaret Cook

125

A long follow-up

David Boyd

128

Surprises on home visits

Roger Smith

130

A paucity of signs

Allan Stevenson

132

Double-barrelled eponyms

Margaret Cook

136

Anecdotes from geriatric medicine

John Wilson

138

My most maddening patient...

Stefan Slater

141

 

Chapter 5 Enquiring Minds

From clinic to research...

Anthony Seaton

145

Exploring schizophrenia...

Eve Johnstone

149

False impressions

Brian Pentland

156

The Paradoxical Puff

Stefan Slater

159

A year of research in Kenya

Michael Steel

166

The paracetamol story

Laurie Prescott

169

An idea through the letterbox

Anthony Seaton

176

What happened next

Eve Johnstone &

178

 

David Owens

 

 

Chapter 6 Careers

Tales from a Chest Physician

James Friend

191

Role models: there’s nothing like a dame

Jean Keeling

194

Making my way...

Helen Zealley

201

From Jamaica to Edinburgh

Sadie Walsh

208

Some doors close but others open

Gordon Paterson

212

 

Chapter 7 General Practice

Is it urgent?

Robert Finnie

219

To prescribe or not?...

Robert Finnie

220

An interlude in general practice

Stefan Slater

223

Four generations talking to patients…

Patricia Donald

227

Has primary care lost its soul?

Douglas Stuart

231

It’s a GP’s life

Ken Lawton

233

 

Chapter 8 Doctors’ Hobbies

‘March dust’

Allan Stevenson

241

The Suzhou paintings...

David Macfadyen

244

Collecting Delftware Tiles...

James Gray

251

Pianos

Allan Stevenson

260

‘The Moving Finger writes’

Stefan Slater

265

Time to stand and stare

Margaret Cook

270

Clematis montana var Wilsonii

Allan Stevenson

272

 

Chapter 9 A Miscellaneous Medley

Ian Donald: a personal memoir

David Purdie

277

Listen to the ticking

Nick Bateman

282

Cimicosis

Margaret Cook

287

‘On a Sunny Afternoon’...

John Gaddie

288

College experiences...

David Macfadyen

289

Professor Stanley Alstead...

Bill Maclennan

294

British Red Cross Surgical Training...

Gordon Paterson

297

The Defence Medical Welfare Service

Gordon Paterson

299

Bring back flies

Anthony Seaton

301

Looking for an eponym

David Macfadyen

303

Get rid of the birds

David Boyd

308

The non-medical dining clubs of Edinburgh

Andrew Calder

311

Two plus two equals four. Well maybe

Philip Welsby

316

A tale of resuscitation

John Irving

318

Not a Mister, just a Doctor

Stefan Slater

319

The tuning fork and the treaty

David Macfadyen

321

 

Chapter 10 Reflections Serious and Not So Serious

Autopsies and the kindness of relatives

Niall Finlayson

331

What do you talk about at parties?

Nick Bateman

334

Many reasons why I became a doctor

David Boyd

336

Two brushes with the law courts

Philip Myerscough

339

Two early lessons

Anthony Seaton

340

Reflections on care: pre-NHS and now

James Friend

342

Do we care anymore?...

Stefan Slater

346

A new specialty?

Philip Welsby

355

“Go home and sit still”

Jacqui Mok

357

First do no harm

Anthony Seaton

359

January 6th, 2021: A Glimpse of Hell

Anthony Seaton

363

Random thoughts on lockdown walks

Philip Welsby

365

Long lost family

Douglas Stuart

367

Doctors in politics

David Boyd

370

Why did you choose Medicine?

Anthony Seaton

376

The keeping of diaries

Allan Stevenson

378

 

 

 

Appendix of the authors

 

382

Appendix of Senior Fellows Club office bearers 1992-2022

 

388

 

Book make-up: (x) + 388 pages, 234 X 156mm, 90gsm G-print matt coated paper, hardback, with hidden tailbands, top and bottom, and 29 illustrations

Publisher: Privately published jointly by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and its Senior Fellows Club. Printed and bound by Bell & Bain, Glasgow

ISBN – 978-1-3999-3250-9

Price is £20 (+ P&P if not collected from the College). UK P&P is £4.49 per copy. Cheques should be made payable to “Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh” with “SFC anthology” written on the back of the cheque and sent to SFC administrator, RCPE, 11 Queen Street, Edinburgh EH2 1JQ. Please make sure to include the name and address that the book should be sent to, or the name that the book is being collected by if you prefer to collect in person from the College.

 

For information on international P&P prices please contact the SFC Administrator (contact information below).

 

For further information about the book or to purchase your own copy over the phone, please contact sfc@rcpe.ac.uk(link sends e-mail) or 0131 247 3652.