Surgery, the Ultimate Placebo: A Surgeon Cuts Through the Evidence

Author(s): Ian Harris

Science

For many complaints and conditions, the benefits from surgery are lower, and the risks higher, than you or your surgeon think. In this book you will see how commonly performed operations can be found to be useless or even harmful when properly evaluated. That these claims come from an experienced, practising orthopaedic surgeon who performs many of these operations himself, makes the unsettling argument particularly compelling. Of course no surgeon is recommending invasive surgery in bad faith, but Ian Harris argues that the evidence for the success for many common operations, including knee arthroscopies, back fusion or cardiac stenting, become current accepted practice without full examination of the evidence. The placebo effect may be real, but is it worth the recovery time, expense and discomfort? You can listen to Rob Kaldor interview Ian Harris for the Co-op podcast


Product Information

Professor Ian Harris is an orthopaedic surgeon who works at Liverpool, St George, St George Private and Sutherland Hospitals in Sydney. His academic affiliation is with UNSW, South Western Sydney Clinical School at Liverpool Hospital, in Sydney. He has a PhD from the University of Sydney on surgical outcomes. He is a member of the Orthopaedic Trauma Association, Australian Orthopaedic Association, Australasian Orthopaedic Trauma Society, Australian Medical Association and the Asia Pacific Orthopaedic Association. He is Chair, ACORN (Arthroplasty Clinical Outcomes Registry) and co-chair, ANZHFR (ANZ Hip Fracture Registry). He has published more than 100 peer-reviewed articles in leading journals.

General Fields

  • : 9781742234571
  • : NewSouth Publishing
  • : NewSouth
  • : 0.318
  • : February 2016
  • : 210mm X 135mm
  • : March 2016
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Ian Harris
  • : Paperback
  • : 1603
  • : English
  • : 617.092