Recollections of a Southwold GP - Dr Christopher Hopkins

Recollections of a Southwold GP

Buch | Hardcover
224 Seiten
2020
Whitefox Publishing Ltd (Verlag)
978-1-913532-21-5 (ISBN)
24,90 inkl. MwSt
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This is much more than a fascinating family memoir. It is an important piece of local and national social history told through the lens of an individual life which covers so much experience. With plenty of colour and anecdotes Christopher describes his upbringing in a privileged class, with travel overseas from a very early age, and Catholic boarding school life during the Second World War. That's all before we get to his career as a devoted family GP. He is a man of many accomplishments, a great sportsman, affectionate father, with friendships of all sorts.



Mary and Christopher married just before he was called up into the army as a young doctor. I caught up with them when they moved

to Southwold where Christopher became a very active local GP. Mary gave him the fullest support, and they became eventually the proud and energetic parents of two boys and two girls.



The range of their activities is stunning: so many family holidays in places sometimes far away. Climbing Ben Nevis seems like an

afternoon outing. But local sports and parish activities of all sorts too, closer to home. Most impressive was the trip Christopher took out to India for three months when he served as a volunteer doctor in a very poor community in the south. Mary joined him for some of the time. His retirement from the NHS, two years early as a result of policy disagreements, is a significant element in this story - but that by no means meant the end of his medical work because he continued to treat many patients with a variety of therapies.



This is now, as I write, a time of national and international medical crisis. Admiring the bravery and skill of NHS staff, who risk their lives facing a lethal epidemic every day, does not mean failing to recognise, as Christopher does, that the NHS needs both more generous funding and organisational reform.



Towards the end of this book Christopher says: 'Dying can be an anxious time for some'. This book, full of life, hope, good cheer, energy and activity, can do much to reduce such anxiety. I hope it is widely read.

--Bruce Kent

Dr Christopher Hopkins was born in London. His early years were spent in Cairo Egypt when Britain kept the peace in the Middle East between the wars with a few troops and four squadrons of biplanes. Age six Christopher swam the Suez Canal (i.e. from Africa to Asia) and at eight climbed to the top of the Great Pyramid. The war years meant he was confined both to a boarding school Ampleforth and Britain. But in the seven years in medical school after the war he was able to expand to cycling round Ireland, hitchhike on the continent, drive to Lisbon in a 1925 Rolls-Royce bought with two others for GBP39, and explore the high seas by yacht from Gibraltar to Norway. He also then had to face the daunting prospect of socialising with the opposite sex for the first time. Just qualified he had to treat victims of the great London smog. Called up in the RAMC he was given the responsibility as the only medical officer at BMH Hamburg for all North Germany. His ambition of being a country doctor by the sea was amply filled in the 32 years at Southwold in Suffolk. There he could practice medicine as a proper family doctor having a cottage hospital with x-ray facilities to hand. It was an ideal place for him and his wife Mary to bring up their family of four to enjoy swimming, riding, sailing, shooting, tennis and partying, as well as for him the seven opening seasons of the Southwold rugby club. He was also able to fulfil his ambition of helping in the third world with a three month sabbatical in South India and Sri Lanka. Learning and using hypnotherapy and acupuncture in the last 10 years in practice gave an added dimension with which he was able to continue helping his fellow human beings in the 30 years since retirement. The government imposing its own regulations of practice caused Dr Hopkins to resign in protest two years early. His prediction of it lowering the morale of GPs has proved true. In his epilogue he gives his views on how this can be remedied.

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 153 x 234 mm
Themenwelt Literatur Biografien / Erfahrungsberichte
Medizin / Pharmazie Medizinische Fachgebiete Medizinethik
ISBN-10 1-913532-21-6 / 1913532216
ISBN-13 978-1-913532-21-5 / 9781913532215
Zustand Neuware
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