Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
Both their li~es had been made easier several months before by the advent
of a young Englishwoman, Winnie August, who now lived in and took care
of the children during their parents' absence. Andrew had found her
through an agency that advertised in medical journals. She was nineteen,
had previously worked as a shop assistant in London and, as Winnie
herself put it, she "wanted to
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lave a workin' 'oliday findin' out what you Yanks are like, then maybe
spend a couple o' years down under with the Aussies." She was cheerful,
quick and, to Andrew's great joy, whipped up breakfast each morning with
lightning speed. "Comes o' practice. Did it for me mum at 'ome," she told
him when he complimented her. Winnie also liked children and Lisa adored
her. Andrew and Celia hoped that Winnie's departure for Australia would
be long delayed.
One other event that came to Celia's attention happened near the end of
1960. The German drug Thalidomide-to be known in the U.S. and Canada as
Kevadon-was submitted to the FDA for marketing approval. According to
drug industry trade magazines, the Merrell Company, which now had North
American rights, had large-scale plans for Thalidomide-Kevadon, believing
the drug would be a huge seller, as it was continuing to be in Europe.
The company was pressing FDA for swift approval. Meanwhile samples of the
drug--officially for "investigative use," though in fact, without
restriction -were being distributed to over a thousand physicians by
enthusiastic Merrell detail men.
The news reminded Celia of her conversation with Sam Hawthorne eight
months earlier when he had reported resentment within Felding-Roth
because, at Celia's suggestion, Thalidomide had been tested only on old
people, then rejected. She wondered briefly if the resentment still
remained, then dismissed the subject as unimportant.
She had other business concerns.
Following Bruce's birth Celia returned to work more quickly than she had
after Lisa was born and was back at Felding-Roth by mid-December. One
reason: it was a busy time in Sales Training. The company was expanding
and a hundred more detail men were being taken on-plus, at Celia's
urging, some detail women, though only a half dozen. Also contributing
to her decision was an infectious sense of national excitement. In
November John F. Kennedy had been elected president and it seemed-from
the graceful rhetoric at least-as if a new era, stimulating and creative,
had begun.
"I want to be part of it all," Celia confided to Andrew. "People are
talking about 'a new beginning' and 'history in the making' and saying
it's a time to be young and in charge of something. Going back to work
means being involved."
"Uh-huh," Andrew had said, almost indifferently, which was unusual. Then,
as if realizing it, he added, "It's okay with me." But
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Andrew's mind was not really on Celia's endeavors; he was preoccupied with
a problem of his own.
The problem concerned Dr. Noah Townsend, Andrew's senior partner and the
respected chief of medicine at St. Bede's Hospital. Andrew had discovered
something about Noah which, ugly and unpleasant, brought into question
the older man's competence to practice medicine.
Dr. Townsend was a drug addict.
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Noah Townsend, now fifty-eight, had for many years appeared to represent
everything a seasoned, experienced physician should be. He was
conscientious, treating all who came to him, whether wealthy or poor, with
equal concern. His appearance was distinguished; in manner he had always
been courtly and dignified. As a result Dr. Townsend had a solid practice
with patients who liked him and were loyal-with good reason, since he
served them well. His diagnostic skills were regarded as remarkable.
Townsend's wife, Hilda, once told Andrew, "I've stood with Noah at a party
and he's looked across the room at a complete stranger and told me
quietly, 'That man is very ill and doesn't know it,' or another time,
'That woman over there-I don't know her name, but she's going to die in
six months.' And he's always been right. Always."
Townsend's patients felt much the same way. Some who exchanged anecdotes
about his accurate diagnoses referred to him as "the witch doctor." One
even brought back from Africa, as a gift, a witch doctor's mask which
Townsend proudly hung on his office wall.
Andrew, too, respected the older doctor's abilities. As well, there had
grown up between the two a genuine and warm affection, not least on
Andrew's part because Townsend had, in all ways, treated his much younger
colleague generously.
Contributing to Andrew's respect was the fact that Noah Townsend stayed
up-to-date medically through systematic reading, some-
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thing many physicians of his age neglected. Yet Andrew had also noticed,
over recent months, a certain vagueness at times on Townsend's part, and
occasional slurred speech. Then there had been those incidents earlier in
the year of Noah's apparently bizarre behavior. The combination of
symptoms made Andrew uneasy, though he continued to rationalize that
stress and tiredness could be their cause, since both doctors had been
working hard, with heavy patient loads.
It was during a November afternoon a month earlier-which Andrew now
remembered as beginning for himself a time of agonized
soul-searching-that unease and vague suspicion had turned to certainty.
The way it happened was that Andrew wished to discuss their schedule of
days off, days when he and Dr. Townsend covered for each other. After
checking to be sure no patient was with his colleague, Andrew knocked
lightly on Townsend's office door and went in. It was something each of
them was used to doing frequently.
Townsend had his back to Andrew and swung around, startled, in his haste
failing to conceal what was in the palm of his hand-a sizable pile of
tablets and capsules. Even then Andrew might have thought nothing of it,
except for the older man's subsequent behavior. Townsend reddened with
embarrassment, then with some bravado brought his hand to his mouth,
shoved the pills inside and with a glass of water flushed them down.
There was no way Townsend could ignore the significance of what Andrew
had seen, but he attempted to make light of it. "So you caught me stoking
up the furnace! . . . Well, I admit I do it now and then--been under a
lot of pressure lately, as you know . . . But never let things get away
from me . . . I'm an old-cowhand doctor, m'boy-know too much to ever lose
control . . . A damn sight too much." Townsend laughed, a laugh which
sounded false. "So don't worry, Andrew-I know where and when to stop."
The explanation did not convince Andrew. Even less convincing was the
slurred speech, a slurring which suggested that the pills Noah Townsend
had just ingested were not the first he had had that day.
Andrew asked, with a sharpness he immediately regretted, "What were you
taking?"
Again the false laugh. "Oh, just a few Dexedrine, some Percodan, a touch
of Darvon for added flavor . . . Andrew, what
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the hell does it matter?" Then, with a touch of belligerence, "Told you
I keep it under control. Now, what did you come to see me about?"
With his mind in a turmoil, Andrew mentioned the subject of days
off-which now seemed absurdly unimportant-speedily settled what was
necessary, and left Noah Townsend's office as quickly as he could. He
needed to be alone. To think.
Andrew was horrified at the stew of drugs-there must have been a dozen
or fifteen tablets and capsules-which his older colleague had casually
downed. According to Noah's own admission, they were stimulants and
depressants---drugs which reacted to each other and which no competent
doctor would prescribe in combination. While not an expert on addiction,
Andrew knew enough to realize the quantity and casualness were hallmarks
of someone who was a long way down the addict's road. And prescription
drugs taken indiscriminately, as Noah clearly was taking them, could be
as dangerous and destroying as any street drug sold illegally.
What to do next? The immediate thing, Andrew decided, was to find out
more.
Over the next two weeks he used whatever time he could spare to visit
medical reference libraries. St. Bede's had a modest one; Andrew knew of
another in Newark. Both had cataloged reports about physicians who became
drug addicts and, as he studied the material, the first thing to become
evident was the common and widespread nature of the problem. The American
Medical Association estimated that some five percent of all physicians
were "impaired" because of drug abuse, alcoholism, or related causes. If
the AMA admitted to that startling figure, Andrew reasoned, the real one
must be higher. Others seemed to agree. Most estimates ranged to ten
percent, several to fifteen.
One conclusion reached by all observers was that doctors got
into trouble because of overconfidence. They were convinced that
their specialized knowledge would let them use drugs without the
habit's becoming dangerous, but almost always they were wrong.
Noah Townsend's words, " * . . never let things get away from me
. . . know too much to ever lose control . . . I know where and
when to stop . . . " seemed a pathetic echo of what Andrew read.
The point was made that doctors became "successful addicts," undetected
for long periods, because of the ease with which they could obtain drugs.
How well Andrew knew it! It was something he had discussed with Celia-the
fact that physicians could get free
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supplies of any drug, virtually in unlimited quantity, merely by asking a
detail man from the company concerned.
In a way he was ashamed of, yet mentally justified as necessary, Andrew
managed to inspect the cupboard in Noah Townsend's office where drug
supplies were kept. He did it at a time when Townsend was at the hospital,
making grand rounds.
The cupboard should have been locked, but it wasn't. In it, piled high and
occupying all available space, was an astounding collection of drugs in
manufacturers' containers, including narcotics of which there was a large
supply. Andrew recognized some which Townsend had named.
Andrew kept some drugs in his own office, samples of those he prescribed
regularly, which he sometimes handed out to patients who he knew were in
financial need. But compared with what was here, his own supply was
trifling. Nor, for safety reasons, did Andrew ever accumulate narcotics. He
whistled softly in amazement. How could Noah be so careless? How had he
kept his secret for so long? How did he take the drugs he did and keep
control? There seemed no simple answers.
Something else shocked Andrew. He discovered from his researches that no
overall program existed either to help doctors in trouble through excessive
drug taking, or to protect their patients. The medical profession ignored
the problem when it could; when it couldn't, it covered it up by secrecy