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The requirement to respect autonomy - The Royal New Zealand ...

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BOOK REVIEWSIntroduction <strong>to</strong> Obstetrics and Gynaecology—3rd editionCynthia Farquhar and Helen RobertsReviewed by Jon Wilcox, general practitioner, Glenfield, AucklandThis updated third edition is a 200-page handbook designed largelyas an undergraduate manual formedical and midwifery students and alsofor medical graduates doing their diplomasin obstetrics and medical gynaecology.<strong>The</strong> second edition came out some13 years ago and clearly medical sciencein O&G does change rapidly enough <strong>to</strong>demand the occasional update.Important current <strong>to</strong>pics which havebeen highlighted in this edition includeprenatal screening, advances in preimplantationgenetic diagnosis, contraception,cervical screening technology,sexual health and newer surgicaltechniques.It is an introduc<strong>to</strong>ry textbook and, assuch, would probably not have enoughdetail <strong>to</strong> be a big seller for general practitionersunless considering pursuing adiploma course. As might be expected,there is not much reference data andnone of the synoptic text is specificallyreferenced.<strong>The</strong>re are good, albeit brief, updated sectionson foetal, pregnancy and synergisticendocrinology, a good update on earlypregnancy loss and the important reclassificationin<strong>to</strong> non-viable and viable loss, agood selection of schematically value-addedultrasound images, a comprehensivesection on the utilisation of ultrasound(earmarked <strong>to</strong> be the next exciting primarycare technology), prenatal screening<strong>to</strong> include the application of NT and maternalserum screening pro<strong>to</strong>cols, severalchapters on normal pregnancy, labourand the puerperium, neonatal care, theabnormal pregnancy (preterm labour andmedical disorders of pregnancy), antepartumand postpartum bleeding, multiplepregnancy, obstetric interventions andan up-<strong>to</strong>-date section on infertility.<strong>The</strong> gynaecology section includes chapterson contraception, therapeutic abortion(medical and surgical), menstrualdisorders, modern cervical screening andgynaecological neoplasia management,painful gynaecological disorders, gynaecologicalinfections and STIs. <strong>The</strong>re is ahelpful small section on sexual difficultiesand also prolapse and incontinencesurgery and a short four-page chapter onthe menopause.While this handbook should not replacea good and perhaps appropriately morecomprehensive text on obstetrics, gynaecologyand women’s health, at wellunder $100 I feel it should be a veryuseful addition <strong>to</strong> the general practice library,albeit mainly perhaps for nursingstaff, medical students and maybe forthe expected influx of new GP registrarsover the next few years.Publisher: <strong>The</strong> University of AucklandDate of publication: 2010No. of pages: 236Health Care and the LawEdi<strong>to</strong>r: Rebecca KeenanReviewed by John Kennelly, Senior Lecturer, Department of General Practice and Primary Health Care, <strong>The</strong> University of Auckland, AucklandHealth Care and the Law is writtenfor health practitioners, riskmanagers, lawyers, educa<strong>to</strong>rs andstudents. As a reference text, and withselective reading of this text, a healthpractitioner will gain insight in<strong>to</strong> <strong>New</strong><strong>Zealand</strong> health law. <strong>The</strong> book aims <strong>to</strong>give an overview of a wide range ofmedicolegal <strong>to</strong>pics. It is inevitable thatthe book is compared <strong>to</strong> Medical Law in<strong>New</strong> <strong>Zealand</strong> (Brookers; 2006), a similarbook but with a greater academic focusand a narrower range of legal <strong>to</strong>pics.Health care law (synonymous with medicallaw) as a field of law has been variouslydescribed as a ‘…an established andthriving academic discipline’ and ‘a disjointedset of statutes and doctrines, designedmainly with nonmedical cases inmind’, so the book is a welcome addition<strong>to</strong> an expanding reper<strong>to</strong>ire for a field oflaw seeking coherence. Health Care andthe Law has a wide mix of legal <strong>to</strong>picsincluding the legal system, regulation,rights, consent, information, medicines,contracts and employment, workers compensationand injury, coronial inquiries,public health and ethics. <strong>The</strong> book couldnot be said <strong>to</strong> suffer from the weaknessof a 1958 health law text, described as an‘ungainly mixture of law and morals’. Itis, however, an analysis of the mixture348 VOLUME 2 • NUMBER 4 • DECEMBER 2010 J OURNAL OF PRIMARY HEALTH CARE

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