'Learn to be at joy with yourself', with Dr Phil Hammond

25/07/2022 13 min

Listen "'Learn to be at joy with yourself', with Dr Phil Hammond"

Episode Synopsis

Gardner. They won a Writer’s Guild Award, a Silver Sony Award and  received record numbers of complaints to the Broadcasting Standards  Council. He has done Edinburgh fringe shows since 1990 and four solo UK  tours, and has appeared on Have I Got News For You, Question Time,Tip for more joy? Have 5 portions of fun per day! 
Dr Phil Hammond's other tips include a) be at joy with yourself b)  self-compassion c) care for others 
For the latest joy updates, please visit www.joehoare.co.uk  
Dr Phil Hammond is an NHS doctor, journalist, broadcaster, speaker,  campaigner and comedian. He was born in the NHS and brought up in Perth,  Western Australia,  leaving at the age of 7 when his Australian father  took his life. Phil was a lecturer at the universities of Birmingham and  Bristol, training medical students and doctors to communicate better  with patients. He was voted Teacher of the Year in by students in  Birmingham. His journalism, campaigning, broadcasting and books have  tried to help patients and carers cope better with life, illness and the  NHS, and seek out the right care.
Phil qualified as a doctor in 1987 and has worked in the NHS for 34  years. As a doctor, he worked part time in general practice for over  twenty years, and has also worked in sexual health. 
He currently works  in a specialist NHS team based at the Royal United Hospital in Bath for  young people with severe fatigue, including post viral fatigue and long  Covid.  Phil presented five series of Trust Me, I’m a Doctor on BBC2,  encouraging patients to be more involved, assertive and questioning, and  was a presenter for BBC Radio Bristol with Dr Phil’s Saturday Surgery  from 2007-2018. He is Private Eye’s medical correspondent, broke the  story of the Bristol heart scandal in 1992 and gave evidence to the  subsequent Public Inquiry. In 2012, Phil was shortlisted, with Andrew  Bousfield, for the Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism for ‘Shoot the  Messenger’, a Private Eye investigation into the shocking treatment of  NHS whistle- blowers. His coverage of the pandemic in Private Eye was  highly praised, and a book of the columns – Dr Hammond’s Covid Casebook –  is a Sunday Times bestseller. He is currently working on an  autobiography – The Art of Living When You Know You’re Going to Die.
As a comedian, Phil was half of the award-winning double-act Struck Off and Die, with Tony Gardner. They won a Writer’s Guild Award, a Silver Sony Award and  received record numbers of complaints to the Broadcasting Standards  Council. He has done Edinburgh fringe shows since 1990 and four solo UK  tours, and has appeared on Have I Got News For You, Question Time, Countdown, The One Show and Long Live Britain. His NHS comedy Polyoaks,  written with David Spicer, had five series on Radio 4. He also presented  multiple series of Pillories of the State, The Music Group and The  Motion Show for Radio 4. In his new 4-part Radio 4 series – Dr Phil’s  Bedside Manner – Phil toured NHS hospitals, chatting intimately with  staff, patients, carers and volunteers, and then cheered them up with a  comedy show. It received rave reviews and is available on the BBC Sounds App.
Phil lives in Somerset with his wife Jo, a GP. They have two adult  children, two dogs and a cat.  Phil is a patron of Julian House – a  charity for the homeless – Heads Up – a mental health charity - the  Doctors’ Support Network, the Herpes Viruses Association, Kissing it  Better and My Death, My Decision. He writes extensively about error and  uncertainty, and openly admits his own mistakes so everyone can laugh  and learn from them. 

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