Bedside Reading

Bedside Reading Podcast
undefined
Feb 11, 2025 • 34min

Unheard

Send us Fan MailWhat a treat recording this episode was.  Such a privilege to meet one of my medical writing heroes,  Dr. Rageshri Dhairyawan to talk about her book, Unheard, The Medical Practice of Silencing. If you haven't read it yet, oh my goodness, I'm actually quite jealous. You're in for a real treat. It's an absolutely wonderful book.I listened to the audiobook and it felt like having Rageshri with me as I was pottering around the house doing my chores and as I was driving to work though it's a very beautiful book in hard copy version as well.  It has been an absolute joy and delight to talk to Rageshri about her really wonderful and very very important book which I think is for everybody.we also mentioned this book and amazing writer: https://wellcomecollection.org/books/divided
undefined
Feb 4, 2025 • 35min

Prophet Song

Send us Fan MailI was so glad to get to talk to GP Amy Fulton about Prophet Song by Paul Lynch.  This is an astonishingly good dystopian fiction novel, which I thoroughly thoroughly enjoyed. It's unusual to find a novel that really has you gripped, sucked into another world imagining something unimaginable and then brought back to earth again and again and again when you realise that this is fiction and of course this is not happening in Ireland where this book is set but that there is a lot more reality in what Paul Lynch is writing about than we want there to be.Prophet Song is an incredibly, incredibly good book, which has really made me think so much. And it was a real joy to talk to Amy about it and think about some of the themes in there that can really make a difference to us as healthcare professionals.
undefined
Jan 28, 2025 • 39min

Aftershock

Send us Fan MailI'd like to dedicate today's episode of Bedside Reading to Corporal Hugh Cunningham of the Royal Engineers.  Hugh died in 2009 as a result of PTSD. And as I read Matthew Green's Aftershock: the Untold Story of Surviving Peace, I thought a lot about him and his family, as well as more widely about other military veterans affected by PTSD. I've really enjoyed my conversation with Manchester Portfolio GP Zalan Alam  today. It is such an important book. I'm not going to lie and say I really enjoyed it. I didn't. I found it an incredibly difficult read. But it is a very, very important book about a subject which we really are not talking enough about.And I really do think this is a book that everybody and anybody who's working anywhere in the health service should be picking upAftershock is a book about PTSD, it's a book about military veterans, about what we are doing and sadly not doing to support them. I recognise that a lot has happened in the 10 years since the book was published so perhaps things are better than they were then. I'm not sure and I don't think we can be complacent and I don't think we can think enough about this incredibly vulnerable group of patients.It's a deservedly emotional and tough read, but we do really need to be thinking about this a lot more and we really need to be doing better.If you want your practice to become a RCGP Veteran Friendly Practice find out more here https://elearning.rcgp.org.uk/course/view.php?id=803It may help to signpost patients to Veteran's Gateway https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/find-support-for-veterans-and-their-familiesZalan also recommends http://www.overcoming.co.uk
undefined
Jan 21, 2025 • 38min

Never Split the Difference

Send us Fan MailI love coming back to books I've read in the past that I've half remembered and half forgotten and it's one of those episodes today. I'm delighted to welcome Sarah Marwick to Bedside Reading to talk about Never Split the Difference: negotiating as if your life depended on it by Chris Voss. This is such an accessible brilliant book written by a former FBI hostage negotiator. You may think, what on earth has hostage negotiation got to do with working in the and NHS?  Actually, there are huge numbers of transferable skills and strategies that we can use in our conversations with patients and with colleagues and with managers. And this is just such a great book, so readable, so accessible, and and full of practical tips and the lived experience wisdom.  It was really, really good to explore these with Sarah and think about how we might use them in our professional and social contexts.
undefined
Jan 14, 2025 • 32min

Age Proof

Send us Fan MailI'm really pleased to welcome GP, lifestyle medicine expert and GP educator Anish Kotecha to Bedside Reading today. We are talking about a book called Age Proof by Rose Ann Kenny. You may be relieved to discover that when we say the science of aging, we are not talking about the science fiction of anti-aging and we're certainly not talking about chemicals or drugs or modifications of anything other than lifestyle. It was really good to talk to Anish about connection, about intimacy, about the quality of relationships, about purpose, about exercise: things that actually are within our power as healthcare professionals to start exploring with our patients. We need to be thinking about the evidence base behind that and how we communicate it more effectively.Follow Anish on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/anish-kotecha-547a4495
undefined
Jan 7, 2025 • 34min

How To Rise

Send us Fan MailHappy New Year listeners! Have you made any New Year's resolutions? Have you decided that 2025 is the year where things are going to be different? Have you been thinking about boundaries? Or about well-being? Or about that hideous word resilience which is so misused by NHS managers and has come to be a bit of a dirty word when actually the concept is a really good one.Today, I'm delighted to be talking to Chrissie Mowbray and Karen Forshaw about their book, How to Rise: a Complete Resilience Manual. This is a really innovative book, which is all about providing us with easily accessible tools to make us better, to be thinking about resilience in a sense of emotional resilience, psychological resilience, physical resilience, relationship resilience, and to try and be better versions of our best selves. It's a really accessible, useful book and I thoroughly enjoyed talking to Chrissie and Karen.Find Karen and Chrissie here: https://www.resilientpractice.co.uk/
undefined
Dec 31, 2024 • 27min

Twixtmas Special 2024

Send us Fan MailI've got a collaborative Twixtmas special coming up today. I've asked a number of friends of the podcast to tell us about their top read of 2024 and what they're most looking forward to reading in 2025. Thanks for joining me in 2024, and I'm looking forward to sharing plenty more books with you in 2025.Featured today are the voices and choices of:Sabina Dosani https://sabinadosani.com/ Leah Hazard https://www.leahhazard.co.uk/ Derek Ochiai https://twitter.com/DrDerekOchiai Helen Blomfield https://www.helenblomfield.co.uk/Pim Dhahan https://www.linkedin.com/in/pim-dhahan-1a21a5b9/ Nicola Ennis https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicola-ennis-3b5ab1215/ Claire McKie https://www.linkedin.com/in/claire-mckie-a54a52234/ Nicola Davis https://bsky.app/profile/drnicoladavis.bsky.social and  https://bsky.app/profile/crxeate.bsky.social Anna Baverstock https://bsky.app/profile/annabav.bsky.social David Hindmarsh https://www.youtube.com/c/GPTemplates Kate Wharton  https://www.instagram.com/katewharton27/?hl=en Dani Hall https://x.com/danihalltweets and https://dontforgetthebubbles.com/The books we recommended are:Brotherless Night by VV GaneshananthanSong of the Whole Wide World by Tamarin NorwoodOrbital by Samantha HarveyIn Memoriam by Alice WynnWhen Breath Becomes Air by Paul KalanithiDemon Copperhead by Barbara KingsolverWednesday's Child by Yiyun Li The Trees by Percival EverettMeditations for Mortals by Oliver BurkemanThe Facemaker by Lindsey FitzharrisDivided by Annabel SowemimoHow to Save Babylon by Safiya SinclairUnheard by Rageshri DhairyawanFeel Good Productivity by Ali AbdalYou be Mother by Meg MasonSmall Things Like These by Claire KeeganThe books we are looking forward to are:Heartstopper 6 by Alice OsemanGood Dirt by Charmaine WilkersonIntermezzo by Sally RooneyBook of Dust Trilogy by Philip PullmanThe Hallmarked Man by Robert GalbraithTell me Everything by Elizabeth StroutThe 5th book in Richard Osman's Thursday Murder Club SeriesThe Elements of Marie Curie by Dava SobelPoems as Friends by Fiona BennettKokoro by Beth KemptonMicroskills by Adaira Landry and Reesa E Lewiss Your Worry Makes Sense Martin BrunetDream Count by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichi
undefined
Dec 24, 2024 • 36min

My Favourite Mistake

Send us Fan MailI imagine there may be lots of listeners who are very familiar with Marion Keyes and the Walsh family so it was a great joy today to be talking to Rosie Shire about the latest in the Walsh family saga, My Favourite Mistake by Marion Keyes. There is some typical Marion Keyes in that you know that nothing really, really bad is ever going to happen, that the plot is going to keep you going as you go along and there's going to be nothing truly miserable.There's quite a lot of depth in this story as we follow Anna, 47, recently split from a long-term relationship, as she moves to small town Ireland from New York. What could possibly go wrong? Well, for a start, a local GP is not going to give her HRT. Rosie and I had a great conversation  about what it is to be middle aged, about relationships, about menopause, about access to HRT. I really hope you're going to enjoy listening to what we had to say.We mentioned some menopause training resources:https://thebms.org.uk/https://www.fsrh.org/Public/Public/Education-and-Training/essentials-of-menopause-care.aspxhttps://www.menopausematters.co.uk/https://drjengunter.com/
undefined
Dec 17, 2024 • 33min

In the Dream House

Send us Fan MailToday's book is one like nothing else I've ever read. It's a real treat to talk to liaison psychiatrist Amy Gledhill about In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Mercado. This is an extraordinary memoir. It is incredibly beautifully written and it is ostensibly about a controlling and abusive relationship with the complicating factor of being a queer relationship. There's much more to it than that. It is incredibly beautifully written, very very short chapters, so incredibly readable andquick and though deep and one that you might well want to go back to again and again. There is so much learning and reflection in the book and I've really really enjoyed exploring it with Amy.
undefined
Dec 10, 2024 • 40min

Own Your Period

Send us Fan MailIt's a huge treat today to welcome Chella Quint OBE to Bedside Reading. Chella is a period activist and educator from Sheffield and she is the author of two absolutely wonderful books including Own Your Period: a fact-filled guide to period positivity which I think is quite possibly one of the best non-fiction books for young people that you could ever want to read. It is phenomenal for older people as well and for grown-ups, for doctors, for anybody, definitely definitely one to put on your Christmas list  to give to lots of people. It's a book that debunks so many period myths and answers so many potentially unanswered questions. I had a great conversation with Chella.  Please do follow her period positive  website https://periodpositive.com/ and and her social media: https://www.instagram.com/period_positive/https://twitter.com/PeriodPositivehttps://www.facebook.com/periodpositive/

The AI-powered Podcast Player

Save insights by tapping your headphones, chat with episodes, discover the best highlights - and more!
App store bannerPlay store banner
Get the app