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It acknowledges the biopsychosocial model without being preachy. A typical entry for “Chronic Pain” doesn’t just list analgesics; it includes a template for the “Pain Agreement” and flags domestic violence as a differential. No feature is complete without balance. Critics note that Murtagh is not a pharmacology text . It will tell you which antibiotic, but not the CYP450 interactions. It is also not a deep-dive on rare disease . If you need the latest immunotherapy protocol for melanoma, go to UpToDate.
Furthermore, some junior doctors find the lack of handholding intimidating. Murtagh assumes you have basic anatomy knowledge. It is a reminder , not a first-time teacher. In an era where we are told to consult chatbots and clinical decision support portals, Murtagh’s General Practice offers something tactile and trustworthy. It does not need Wi-Fi. It does not track your clicks. It sits, spine-cracked and coffee-stained, on the desk of the on-call doctor at 2 AM. General Practice Murtagh
Need to remove a foreign body from a child’s ear? Turn to the “Procedures” section. Need to do a vasectomy? It is there (with diagrams). Need to explain a Plaster of Paris backslab to a nurse who has never seen one? Murtagh has the script. Critics note that Murtagh is not a pharmacology text
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In a world of rapidly shrinking consultation times and exploding digital formularies, one question haunts the GP trainee: Where do I start? If you need the latest immunotherapy protocol for
For over three decades, the answer for hundreds of thousands of doctors has been the same: reach for the spiral-bound bible with the red cover. is more than a textbook; it is a cultural artifact of Australian—and indeed global—primary care.
As we navigate the post-pandemic landscape of chronic disease, mental health crises, and fragmented specialist access, Murtagh’s core philosophy— “safe, effective, and compassionate care” —has never been more relevant. Unlike hospital medicine, where a patient arrives with a label (“appendicitis”), general practice starts with a fog: “I feel tired, doctor.” This is where Murtagh shines.