Defining Moments In Medicine A golden age definedFifty years of medical advances |
MJA 2001; 174: 8
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In The rise and fall of modern medicine, James Le Fanu (general
practitioner and medical writer for numerous British newspapers and
magazines) describes the period since World War II as a golden age of
achievement for medicine. He lists 36 major advances from 1935 to 1998
and, of these, identifies 12 "definitive moments" (Box). The themes
of these definitive moments include the decline of infectious
diseases, the widening scope of surgery, major developments in the
treatment of specific diseases such as cancer, and new diagnostic
techniques. Most of the important innovations occurred between the
1940s and 1970s (the rise), with a subsequent marked decline (the
fall).
For this issue of the Journal commemorating the Centenary of Federation, we wanted to put on record the defining moments in Australian medicine over the past 50 years. We asked distinguished clinicians in the nine major fields of medicine to describe the defining moments in their specialty. They were requested to consult with, or enlist as coauthor, someone of a different generation to ensure that they covered the full breadth of the past 50 years. Some had trouble with "defining moments" and have given us "defining movements" instead. Overall, at the end of the 20th century
So, whither medicine in the 21st century? Le Fanu believes that "the readily do-able has been done, the chronic diseases of ageing have been ameliorated, and the bottom of the barrel of lucky drug discoveries has been scraped". If this is true, medical advances in the future have limited prospects, and are more likely to be refinements of existing treatments or techniques than major breakthroughs. We can only wait and see (while continuing to look for those magic bullets). Bronwyn Gaut ©MJA 2001
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