SAVING OUR EMERGENCY SERVICES
A top surgeon wrote to me following the brutal murder of former boxing champion Corrie Sanders. He said I was right to question whether Sanders had been let down by our public health system in his time of need. He noted that the performance of a medical trauma service could determine the severity of the charges against arrested suspects.
We will never know whether Sanders could have been saved by expert medical care. But if so, the accused would have been charged with attempted murder, rather than murder. Blood loss is the usual cause of death after trauma.
Experts say that Princess Diana could have survived her car accident if she had received more competent and speedy medical care. She had a torn pulmonary artery, but French paramedics dithered as to where she should be transferred as a VIP.
The surgical profession is emotionally and physically demanding. Trauma surgery is particularly grueling, including long and after hours work. But medical graduates increasingly opt for more comfortable career directions within medicine.
My surgeon correspondent links this to the trend of women outnumbering men in medical schools. In England, a shortage of medical specialists was developing because more than 60% of medical students were female.