Available Formats
Paperback, Export/Airside
Published: 8th March 2023
Hardback
Published: 22nd March 2023
Paperback
Published: 17th July 2024
One Medicine: How understanding animals can save our lives
By (Author) Dr Matt Morgan
Simon & Schuster Ltd
Simon & Schuster Ltd
22nd March 2023
2nd March 2023
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Popular medicine and health
610
Hardback
288
Width 135mm, Height 216mm
It all started with a Hob Nob. As Dr Matt Morgan, an intensive care consultant, examined a patient who had suffered a cardiac arrest after inhaling some biscuit crumbs, he saw a flock of birds fly past the window. They must inhale objects all the time when flying, how do they survive he thought to himself. This began an investigation that spanned continents, species and millennia.
For animal science has so much to teach us about human medicine. While some of the overlaps and parallels are obvious we know how much DNA we share with primates, the first pig heart has been transplanted into a human there is so much more that we have learnt from the animal world. For example, studying kangaroos, in particular the females three vaginas, has improved in-vitro fertilisation success rates. Watching how a giraffe breathes can help save the life of someone struggling with asthma. Investigating why birds that live in the frozen Arctic circle dont freeze to death led to advances with treating hypothermia. Getting a ECG on the 150kg heart of a humpback whale was instrumental to keeping patients with cardiac failure living longer.
We owe animals so much, its time to focus on examining how they live and what we still have to learn from them. Better shared understanding of how our species coexists with millions of others can lead to untold medical advances, help both humans and animals and improve the world for all creatures from single-celled bacteria to a 30,000 kg whale. Who knows, maybe a kiss from a frog will save your life