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Dr. David Healy

Psychiatrist. Psychopharmacologist. Scientist. Author.

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Modern Myths

The Medicine Maker

December 18, 2013 4 Comments

Axel Gallén - the Kalevala

Editorial Note: This is based on the Finnish National Epic, the Kalevala. The image comes from the series painted by Axel Gallen to illustrate the Kalevala. Crusoe spent years trying to make a Medicine Maker. She was finally successful at the end of a long Winter just as the first signs of growth appeared on the trees. Everyone for miles around came when they heard the news. … [Read more...] about The Medicine Maker

Medystopia

December 11, 2013 3 Comments

Mass vaccination

Editorial Note: Crusoe has not been lying low since The Shipwreck of the Singular and The Girl who Wasn't Heard When She Cried Wolf. Check these out for previous Crusoe posts. The AbbVie story calls for a decent myth. Here is a start. Sink all vaccines to the bottom of the sea? Crusoe was listening to Oliver give out. "They called me yesterday evening", he said, "to tell me … [Read more...] about Medystopia

Marilyn’s Curse

May 14, 2013 6 Comments

Put-Me-To-Sleep Pills

Editorial Note: This an unexpected eighth part to the Lasagna Trilogy that started with Not So Bad Pharma and runs through to Witty A: Report to the President. Ondine Ondine was a nymph whose lover swore that his every waking breath was a testimony to his love of her. Finding him unfaithful, she cursed him – should he fall asleep he would stop breathing. Marilyn died of an … [Read more...] about Marilyn’s Curse

The Girl Who Was Not Heard When She Cried Wolf

January 1, 2013 24 Comments

The doctor's nightmare (from Fildes)

Crusoe was called to see Lisbeth. The girl - young woman was mute and catatonic by day but after she fell asleep she had nightmares when she wailed piteously, rent her nightdress, walked in her sleep muttering ‘the children, the children’ or other such phrases. It was a similar pattern each night, the parents said. The dreams seemed to repeat. Crusoe came in the evening when … [Read more...] about The Girl Who Was Not Heard When She Cried Wolf

The Shipwreck of the Singular

December 17, 2012 5 Comments

Shipwrecked by the cure

Crusoe’s first appearance was in The Creation of Psychopharmacology, where in recognition of the tensions inherent in medicine between the numerous who enter clinical trials and the single person being treated by a doctor, the book opened with a quote from George Oppen’s Of Being Numerous, in which he notes that: “Crusoe we say was rescued”. Since Oppen wrote these lines, … [Read more...] about The Shipwreck of the Singular

The Data Access Wars

December 10, 2012 1 Comment

What does your doctor know about your medicines?

This is the first of three Crusoe posts. For background on Crusoe, see Watch where you wave that wand, The Oedipus Effect, The Tree must go. Beta Centauri was unquestionably a long way from Massachusetts. Somewhat to her surprise Crusoe found breathing no problem, and the temperature seemed just about right. The scenery as they’d come in was not unlike that of a … [Read more...] about The Data Access Wars

The Tree Must Go

August 16, 2012 8 Comments

Tree in the countryside

Crusoe had a chance to view the new facility - the brainchild of one of the world’s wealthiest men, who had made his name in a race to sequence the genetic code. He had famously used his own DNA in the process. He later went on to create synthetic life and it was from synthetic biology He made his fortune. The inspiration to recreate Eden came from watching an old movie, The … [Read more...] about The Tree Must Go

The Oedipus Effect

August 13, 2012 3 Comments

Crusoe was called to see the woman. It all began she said when on the way home after a successful board meeting, taking shelter from a sudden downpour, he stepped into an empty building. There he saw something. Perhaps it was the nutmeg with the meal or the mushrooms that did it. A bunch of children, he said, sitting looking at a stockmarket ticker tape. Many of them appeared … [Read more...] about The Oedipus Effect

One Script To Rule Them All

July 23, 2012 11 Comments

So Long and Thanks for all the Fish portrayed doctors in a rather flattering light – the victims of a tragedy. They were portrayed as losing out in a Faustian bargain when they failed to realize the hazards in making all new drugs available on prescription only. The bargain offered them a chance to entrench themselves inescapably in healthcare as the only legal source of all … [Read more...] about One Script To Rule Them All

May Fools’ Day

May 3, 2012 2 Comments

Jester Hat

Following the long-standing tradition, dating back at least to Chaucer, of playing practical jokes on May 1, The Scientist clearly thought it would be a good idea to show the outside world that science doesn’t always have to be stuffy and picked the appropriate day to demonstrate the point (http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/32019/title/Data-Diving/). May … [Read more...] about May Fools’ Day

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