Michael O'Donnell
Encyclopedia
Michael O'Donnell is a British physician, journalist, author, and broadcaster.

He became a full-time writer after working for 12 years as a doctor. On BBC Radio Four he was chairman of My Word!
My Word!
My Word! was a long-running radio panel game broadcast by the BBC on the Home Service and Radio 4 . It was created by Edward J. Mason and Tony Shryane, and featured comic writers Denis Norden and Frank Muir, famous in Britain for the series Take It From Here...

and wrote and presented Relative Values. On BBC Television
BBC Television
BBC Television is a service of the British Broadcasting Corporation. The corporation, which has operated in the United Kingdom under the terms of a Royal Charter since 1927, has produced television programmes from its own studios since 1932, although the start of its regular service of television...

 he presented the O’Donnell Investigates … series' and, on Yorkshire Television
Yorkshire Television
Yorkshire Television, now officially known as ITV Yorkshire and sometimes unofficially abbreviated to YTV, is a British television broadcaster and the contractor for the Yorkshire franchise area on the ITV network...

, the controversial Tuesday Documentary Is Your Brain Really Necessary?. He has worked as a newspaper and magazine columnist, published two novels, edited World Medicine, and written and presented over 100 television and radio documentaries.

Early career

He was born in Yorkshire, the son of a General Practitioner
General practitioner
A general practitioner is a medical practitioner who treats acute and chronic illnesses and provides preventive care and health education for all ages and both sexes. They have particular skills in treating people with multiple health issues and comorbidities...

, and educated at Stonyhurst College
Stonyhurst College
Stonyhurst College is a Roman Catholic independent school, adhering to the Jesuit tradition. It is located on the Stonyhurst Estate near the village of Hurst Green in the Ribble Valley area of Lancashire, England, and occupies a Grade I listed building...

 and Trinity Hall, Cambridge
Trinity Hall, Cambridge
Trinity Hall is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge, England. It is the fifth-oldest college of the university, having been founded in 1350 by William Bateman, Bishop of Norwich.- Foundation :...

, where he studied Natural Sciences. At Cambridge he joined the Footlights
Footlights
Cambridge University Footlights Dramatic Club, commonly referred to simply as the Footlights, is an amateur theatrical club in Cambridge, England, founded in 1883 and run by the students of Cambridge University....

 and appeared in La Vie Cambridgienne (1948), the first Footlights revue televised by the BBC
BBC
The British Broadcasting Corporation is a British public service broadcaster. Its headquarters is at Broadcasting House in the City of Westminster, London. It is the largest broadcaster in the world, with about 23,000 staff...

. He was also a member of the Young Writer’s Group founded by Stephen Joseph
Stephen Joseph
Stephen Joseph was an English stage director and pioneer of "theatre in the round".-Life:Stephen Joseph was born in London, the son of Hermione Gingold and the publisher Michael Joseph . He was educated at Clayesmore School in Dorset...

 and succeeded Joseph as editor of Cambridge Writing. His short story A Sense of Value was later reprinted, with a commendation from EM Forster, in an anthology of post-war Cambridge writing.

He completed his medical training at St Thomas' Hospital
St Thomas' Hospital
St Thomas' Hospital is a large NHS hospital in London, England. It is administratively a part of Guy's & St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust. It has provided health care freely or under charitable auspices since the 12th century and was originally located in Southwark.St Thomas' Hospital is accessible...

 ‘paying his way’ through the clinical course by working as a part-time scriptwriter at the BBC Variety Department, a petrol pump attendant in Streatham, and a stage lighting technician for the theatrical producers H. M. Tennent. He also teamed up with the pianist Catherine Dorrington Ward, who later became his wife, to form a cabaret act. When he applied for admission to St Thomas’s, he opened his interview with a tentative question, ‘Could this hospital countenance the notion of a part-time medical student?’ To which the Medical School Secretary replied, ‘Is there any other kind?

After qualifying as a doctor in 1952 he worked as a GP first in Fulham, then in Weybridge, Surrey. In 1964, when he retired from clinical medicine to become a professional writer, he worked for a time as a copywriter at the J Walter Thompson
JWT
JWT is one of the largest advertising agencies in the United States and the fourth-largest in the world. It is one of the key companies of Sir Martin Sorrell's WPP Group and is headquartered in New York. The global agency is led by Worldwide Chairman and Global CEO Bob Jeffrey who took over the...

 advertising agency, was a co-presenter and writer of the Associated Television
Associated TeleVision
Associated Television, often referred to as ATV, was a British television company, holder of various licences to broadcast on the ITV network from 24 September 1955 until 00:34 on 1 January 1982...

 (ATV) series You'd Never Believe It and wrote three television plays for ATV using the pseudonym Michael Bancroft.

World Medicine

In 1965 he became a columnist on the newly-launched magazine World Medicine and, a year later, was appointed editor, a post he held for 16 years.

World Medicine was unlike any other medical publication. According to journalist Paul Vaughan, ‘O’Donnell was a remarkable medical editor, a man who had ricocheted gaily between the professions of medicine and journalism, with an occasional lurch into the theatre… He now contrived to bring all these talents together as editor of ‘’World Medicine’’ and … established it as a bright entertaining and - in terms of medical politics - radical newcomer’.

O'Donnell himself claimed his editorial approach drew heavily on his experience in Weybridge in the 1950s when local GPs met at the Cottage Hospital after their morning surgeries to drink coffee and exchange ideas and gossip. ‘It was a time for passing on what we had learned of the clinical facts of life, and for seeking one another's advice about real problems in real patients. What made those conversations memorable were the irreverence and scepticism with which they were conducted, qualities rarely encountered in the world of medicine as it was written about. In those days, medical journals portrayed a more solemn universe than that in which we and our patients seemed to be living. When serendipity parked me in an editor's chair, I decided I wouldn't just report news about medicine but would try to reflect the uncertainties, the paradoxes, and the black comedy that make practising our craft so rewarding.'

World Medicine attracted a large and intensely loyal readership but in 1982, after a dispute with the publishers over editorial policy, O’Donnell was forced to leave. The senior editorial staff resigned in sympathy and ‘most of his more talented contributors stopped writing for the magazine in a rare demonstration of self-sacrificial sympathy and protest.’ The publication folded two years later. With a new editor and new staff, it lacked, according to Paul Vaughan, ‘the mercurial wit and verve that were O’Donnell’s trademark.’

An editorial in the British Medical Journal
British Medical Journal
BMJ is a partially open-access peer-reviewed medical journal. Originally called the British Medical Journal, the title was officially shortened to BMJ in 1988. The journal is published by the BMJ Group, a wholly owned subsidiary of the British Medical Association...

 (BMJ) commented. ‘Michael O'Donnell, whose appointment as editor of World Medicine was abruptly ended two weeks ago, has put both the profession and the public in his debt. He has campaigned vigorously and successfully for the apparently impossible, such as reform of the GMC; he has got doctors to laugh at themselves and their practices; he has highlighted the pettiness of the jacks-in-office and their new bureaucracy; and he has exposed awkwardness that the Establishment would sooner have forgotten about. … Not to have read Michael O’Donnell's World Medicine was to have been incomplete as a doctor’.

Writer and Broadcaster

After leaving World Medicine, O’Donnell expanded his career as a freelance writer and broadcaster. He published two novels and was a columnist for The Times
The Times
The Times is a British daily national newspaper, first published in London in 1785 under the title The Daily Universal Register . The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times are published by Times Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary since 1981 of News International...

, a job from which he withdrew when the editor Harold Evans
Harold Evans
Sir Harold Matthew Evans is a British-born journalist and writer who was editor of The Sunday Times from 1967 to 1981. He has written various books on history and journalism...

  was forced to resign. He then wrote regular columns for The Guardian
The Guardian
The Guardian, formerly known as The Manchester Guardian , is a British national daily newspaper in the Berliner format...

, New Scientist
New Scientist
New Scientist is a weekly non-peer-reviewed English-language international science magazine, which since 1996 has also run a website, covering recent developments in science and technology for a general audience. Founded in 1956, it is published by Reed Business Information Ltd, a subsidiary of...

and Vogue
Vogue (magazine)
Vogue is a fashion and lifestyle magazine that is published monthly in 18 national and one regional edition by Condé Nast.-History:In 1892 Arthur Turnure founded Vogue as a weekly publication in the United States. When he died in 1909, Condé Montrose Nast picked up the magazine and slowly began...

and the first signed weekly column to be published by the BMJ
BMJ
BMJ is a partially open-access peer-reviewed medical journal. Originally called the British Medical Journal, the title was officially shortened to BMJ in 1988. The journal is published by the BMJ Group, a wholly owned subsidiary of the British Medical Association...

 (1983–86). Later he was a regular contributor to The Listener and Punch
Punch (magazine)
Punch, or the London Charivari was a British weekly magazine of humour and satire established in 1841 by Henry Mayhew and engraver Ebenezer Landells. Historically, it was most influential in the 1840s and 50s, when it helped to coin the term "cartoon" in its modern sense as a humorous illustration...

.

O’Donnell has written and presented over 100 television and radio documentaries. They include the ground-breaking BBC Television
BBC Television
BBC Television is a service of the British Broadcasting Corporation. The corporation, which has operated in the United Kingdom under the terms of a Royal Charter since 1927, has produced television programmes from its own studios since 1932, although the start of its regular service of television...

 series O’Donnell Investigates …, (1985–89) which presented the links emerging in the 1980s between diet, social behaviour, and disease, and two Tuesday Documentaries for Yorkshire Television
Yorkshire Television
Yorkshire Television, now officially known as ITV Yorkshire and sometimes unofficially abbreviated to YTV, is a British television broadcaster and the contractor for the Yorkshire franchise area on the ITV network...

 (YTV): Part of Life (1981), which explored the nature of teenage suicide, and Is your brain really necessary? (1982). He was Scientific Adviser on the Lindsay Anderson film O Lucky Man!
O Lucky Man!
O Lucky Man! is a 1973 British comedy-drama fantasy film, intended as an allegory on life in a capitalist society. Directed by Lindsay Anderson, it stars Malcolm McDowell as Mick Travis, whom McDowell had first played as a disaffected public schoolboy in his first film performance in Anderson's...

 (1973) and for a string of YTV popular science programmes: Don’t ask me, Don’t just sit there, Where there’s life.(1979–83)

On Radio 4 he was the last chairman of My Word!
My Word!
My Word! was a long-running radio panel game broadcast by the BBC on the Home Service and Radio 4 . It was created by Edward J. Mason and Tony Shryane, and featured comic writers Denis Norden and Frank Muir, famous in Britain for the series Take It From Here...

( 1983–90), the panel game with Frank Muir and Denis Norden, and wrote and presented the award-winning series Relative Values (1987–97) which the radio critic Anne Karpf nominated as her favourite programme. ‘Crucial to its success is Michael O’Donnell whose interviewing technique is spare, not to say minimalist, and isn’t a lump-in-the-hroat heavy empathy guy. O’Donnell has no hint of the Moral Majority about him but, though uncensorious, he doesn’t idealise or try to act the shrink.’

He was also a regular chatterer on Stop The Week with Robert Robinson and wrote and presented the series Utopia and Other Destinations (1996–98), Murder, Medicine, and Magic (1998–2001), and The Age-old Dilemma (2007).

GMC 'Rebel'

Before 1969 the only contact most UK doctors had with their self-regulatory body the General Medical Council
General Medical Council
The General Medical Council registers and regulates doctors practising in the United Kingdom. It has the power to revoke or restrict a doctor's registration if it deems them unfit to practise...

 (GMC) was when they qualified and paid a one-off fee to have their names entered on the Medical Register, a list of doctors the GMC deemed adequately trained to practice medicine. But, that year, the GMC announced that in future doctors would have to pay an Annual Retention Fee (ARF) to remain on the Register. The fee angered doctors who believed they had a lifetime contract and were not keen to finance the GMC’s “expansionist ambitions” In a postal ballot, 11,540 World Medicine readers voted against the ARF and only 466 in favour.

O’Donnell saw the imposition of the ARF as an opportunity to reform an institution which he claimed was undemocratic and unrepresentative. Only 11 of the GMC’s 46 members were elected. The others were appointed by the Universities, Royal Colleges and the Privy Council. All were white and only one was a woman. The council, he wrote, often gave the impression that it represented ‘a medical establishment uninfluenced by or accountable to workaday doctors.’ And the arbitrary way it instituted disciplinary proceedings led ‘some doctors — not all of them paranoid — to wonder whether the decision to prosecute is sometimes less arbitrary than selective … more indulgent to patricians than to proles.’ O’Donnell suggested doctors should not pay the new fee until the GMC was reformed. The campaign for reform was taken up by the Junior Hospital Doctors Association (JHDA) a breakaway group from the BMA formed by hospital doctors below the rank of consultant.

A GMC election was due in 1971. The elections had usually been a formality. The BMA nominated medical politicians nearing retirement, ‘old political warhorses put out to grass’, and they were returned, often unopposed. In 1971 O’Donnell and two leading members of the JHDA stood as candidates and were elected. The medical newspaper Pulse commented ‘If this was anyone’s election, it was Michael O’Donnell’s for the issues were the ones to which he first drew attention in World Medicine and continued to press with a relentlessness which drew strictures in Presidential addresses.’

The ‘rebels’ continued, from within the council, to campaign for a government enquiry into the GMC’s activities but were always voted down. The BMA tried unsuccessfully to negotiate compromise solutions. Doctors in hospitals around the country held protest meetings at which the GMC foolishly declined to be represented and BBC Television's Panorama devoted an edition to exploring the dispute. The Daily Telegraph
The Daily Telegraph
The Daily Telegraph is a daily morning broadsheet newspaper distributed throughout the United Kingdom and internationally. The newspaper was founded by Arthur B...

 ran articles supporting the dissidents and The Times
The Times
The Times is a British daily national newspaper, first published in London in 1785 under the title The Daily Universal Register . The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times are published by Times Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary since 1981 of News International...

 published an editorial headed ‘Clapping Rebel Doctors in Irons’. Un-dissuaded, the GMC voted in November 1972 to ‘strike off’ all doctors who withheld their ARF. It refused to reveal the number of doctors who had refused to pay — rumours suggested 8,000 to 10,000 — but, faced by the prospect of the NHS losing the services of a large number of doctors, the Secretary of State, Sir Keith Joseph
Keith Joseph
Keith St John Joseph, Baron Joseph, Bt, CH, PC , was a British barrister and politician. A member of the Conservative Party, he served in the Cabinet under three Prime Ministers , and is widely regarded to have been the "power behind the throne" in the creation of what came to be known as...

 set up the enquiry the ‘rebels’ had asked for. He appointed as chairman Dr (later Sir) Alec Merrison
Alec Merrison
Sir Alexander Walter Merrison FRS, was a British physicist born in Wood Green, London on 20 March 1924. He was a professor in Experimental Physics at Liverpool University and the first Director of the new Daresbury Nuclear Physics Laboratory...

.

The Merrison Committee reported in 1975. All parties accepted its recommendations for radical reform and, after negotiation over details, a new Medical Act went on the Statute Book in 1978. A new GMC President, Sir John (later Lord) Richardson set about implementing the reforms. The council became ‘more democratic and a good deal less straight-laced … rather more concerned with shortcomings which prejudice good patient care and rather less with private sexual relations, and allegations of self-advertisement … more argument in the chamber and less unquestioning acceptance of the dicta of committee chairman and the secretariat’

O’Donnell felt the impetus for change came to a halt when Richardson retired. In 1989 he told an interviewer that, though the GMC had changed for the better, many of the changes were cosmetic. It remained a stuffy body, reactive rather than proactive. He also thought the council was far too large. The universities and medical schools refused to amalgamate their membership and, to protect the Merrison principle of an elected majority, the council had to add another elected member to match each new academic appointment. By 1989 the number of members had reached 102.

He was also depressed by ‘the habit of some senior GMC members to work to an agenda significantly different from that allegedly being discussed’ and described how ‘… when I was appointed to a working party set up ostensibly to recommend change, it soon became clear that certain members were so determined to prevent us recommending anything useful that, like caricature bureaucrats, we spent all of our first meeting (out of eight), and most of our second, debating what our title should be. And when we eventually produced our sadly emasculated recommendations, the GMC’s reaction - I kid you not - was to set up yet another working group’. The petty politicking and the oversized council, he claimed, meant an inevitable ceding of power to a burgeoning bureaucracy.

Though disenchanted, O’Donnell stayed on the council until 1996 coming top of the poll in every election. Three years later he told a meeting of medical writers why he hadn’t resigned.‘I was in a unique position because I was outside the medical career structure and uninterested in preferment. I didn’t have to maintain diplomatic silences or say things I didn’t believe in order to get a job, to defend the interests of an institution to which I belonged, or to be gifted one of the prize carrots available on the medical patronage network. I was, in short, the only member of the council free to call things as I saw them.’ He has often expressed his belief that ‘the only safe place for Authority in a free society is on the defensive’ and that one of his jobs as a writer ‘is to keep it there’

Although for his last two years he was Chairman the Standards Committee, he later described his role on the GMC as ‘Rebel in Residence’.

Lucy in the sky

His daughter Lucy O'Donnell was a childhood friend of Julian Lennon
Julian Lennon
John Charles Julian Lennon is an English musician, songwriter, actor, and photographer. He is the son of John Lennon and Lennon's first wife, Cynthia Powell. Beatles manager Brian Epstein was his godfather. He has a younger half-brother, Sean Lennon. Lennon was named after his paternal...

 and Julian’s drawing of her inspired John Lennon
John Lennon
John Winston Lennon, MBE was an English musician and singer-songwriter who rose to worldwide fame as one of the founding members of The Beatles, one of the most commercially successful and critically acclaimed acts in the history of popular music...

's song Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds
Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds
"Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" is a song written primarily by John Lennon and credited to Lennon–McCartney, for The Beatles' 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band...

. After her death from Lupus in September 2009, Julian recorded a new song Lucy. Proceeds from the sales helped endow a Research Award named after her which he set up in partnership with the Lupus Foundation of America. Proceeds from sales of the song also go to the St Thomas' Lupus Trust in London.

Awards

In 1995, in recognition of his achievements in medical journalism, O’Donnell was elected an honorary member of the American Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society but in 1997 declined the offer of an OBE ‘for services to medicine and to journalism’.

He had often criticised what he thought was the pernicious influence of the honours system on medicine. In his Sceptic’s Medical Dictionary he defines Knight Starvation as an ‘Affective disorder that afflicts senior doctors in their early to mid-50s. A progressive condition that deteriorates with the publication of each Honours List and, in longstanding cases, can produce serious erosion of judgement and integrity’.

And in 1993 he described how “Some years ago, I wrote in the BMJ of an unnamed doctor whom I'd much admired until he achieved the knighthood he’d so coveted “with an act that denied the very qualities for which he’d won my respect”. The editor and I received pained complaints from three people who assumed I was writing about them. I had, in fact, been writing about someone else. I still wonder what those three had been up to.’

In 2007 the Medical Journalists' Association (UK) honoured him with its first ever Lifetime Achievement Award.

Select bibliography

  • The Devil's Prison (Gollancz 1982)
  • Doctor! Doctor! An Insider's Guide to the Games Doctors Play (Gollancz 1986)
  • The Long Walk Home (Gollancz 1988)
  • How to Succeed in Business Without Sacrificing Your Health (Gollancz 1988)
  • A Sceptic's Medical Dictionary (BMJ Publishing Group 1997)
  • Medicine's Strangest Cases (Robson Books 2002)
  • Madness and creativity in Literature and Culture: Doctors as Performance Artists (Palgrave Macmillan 2005)
  • Dr Donovan's Bequest: Tales from the Slagthorpe Archive (Matador 2006)
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