General Practice Murtagh -
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
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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? Critics note that Murtagh is not a pharmacology text
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. 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.
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.