Memoirs written by doctors in the twilight of their careers are not always instructive. Olivier Dulac escapes this trap. Because much more than professional life, he tells us about a discipline.
When Olivier Dulac was a very young doctor, “These diseases were nothing but a vast mystery, an inscrutable magma.”. In 1973, when he was admitted to the Saint-Vincent de Paul Hospital in Paris’ only neurology department, “Pediatrics books ignored neurology. neurology books, children’s. MRI, scanner and neuropsychology did not exist, the electroencephalogram did “archaic”, “Fewer than five antiepileptic drugs were available, and their appropriate indications were still unclear.”
But above all, “No one (…) wanted to deal with this…
Source: Le Figaro

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