Author Archives: admin

Revisiting the Doctor-Patient Relationship

I am encouraged of late to remind myself of the longstanding literature on the doctor-patient relationship. For many decades I travelled with bands of students and doctors from Parsons, Freidson and active versus passive relations to more recent ideals of reciprocity, concordance and so on. But things have changed, at least in England, as at… Read More »

Notes on the Health & Social Care Act, 2022

Two themes that have run through my blogs over many years have been: (i) the Tories have long been intent on killing off the NHS and bringing in private providers, and (ii) Lansley’s wordy and often misunderstood Health and Social Care Act of 2012 opened the door for later moves to this end. COVID provided… Read More »

Lockdown Diaries of the Working Class

This will doubtless be a shorter blog than usual, principally because I neither know quite what to say, let alone how to say it. I usually find words come readily enough so it’s a relatively novel experience. The topic is The Lockdown Diaries of the Working Class by the Working Class Collective. This was a… Read More »

Lobaczewski on ‘Pathocracy’

This is a quick blog on Andrew Lobaczewski’s notion of ‘pathocracy’ and draws liberally on Steve Taylor’s summary account in Psychology Today (2019). Arising out of his own experience of suffering under the Nazi occupation of Poland, he was motivated to develop a field of study he termed ‘ponerology’, or the investigation of human evil.… Read More »

Further Thoughts on the GBH

For approximately two decades I have formulated and commended a ‘greedy bastards hypothesis’ (GBH for short). This was done with health inequalities in mind. It asserts that health inequalities in Britain, and indeed in kindred societies, are in large part an unintended consequence of the strategic, profit-seeking and often predatory behaviours of a hard core… Read More »

Discursive and Presentational Forms

My rate of production of blogs has dropped off of late. This is probably in part because my attention has been diverted by COVID, but it’s also a function of the fact that I have been writing my book on critical realism and sport. I may be tiring more quickly too, but let’s not go… Read More »

‘Greedy Bastards’: Gordon Brown 0 Bankers 1

Gordon Brown has much to answer for, but he was not Blair. Politicians’ autobiographies can be expected to comprise a litany of excuses. I’ve just read his My Life, Our Times, in which he seems surprised that he could not accomplish more of what – I think – he genuinely wanted to accomplish. I’m with… Read More »

A Brief Note on Ethics

Here I am sitting in a café in Dorking pondering how and why some people get paid for writing newspaper columns or other pieces on things they know remarkably little about, as it were, as a job; and now I’m perhaps about to do something comparable, venture a few words on ethics. But I guess… Read More »

The Village Christmas Concert, 2021

We were triply indebted to the Mickleham Choral Society during Christmas 2021. First, they provided us with a much-needed dose of seasonal normality after nearly two years of pandemic disruption: they brought us belatedly together once more to celebrate a traditional village event. Second, they pulled off this concert with an under-strength choir and on… Read More »

Books Read in 2021

I have grown accustomed to revisiting the books read in the past year with a view to selecting a few to recommend. In 2021 I am surprised to discover that I read considerably more than in previous years; maybe the lockdowns and lack of alternatives to reading helped out here. At any event, my list… Read More »