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EDITOR,--I am encouraged by Simon Chapman's suggestion that doctors who smoke are undesirable in primary care.1 Perhaps it is important that we preserve the fantasy that doctors are fundamentally different from their patients rather than acknowledging that we have all of the same human failings and using our joint experience of imperfection to understand the difficulties we all face in balancing the costs and benefits of our behaviour. We should also ignore Doll et al's findings that "those who stopped smoking before middle age subsequently avoided almost all of the excess risk associated with smoking"2 and thus that well informed medical students in their 20s are not technically endangering their health and are perhaps simply enjoying themselves while they can do so with relative impunity.
I am glad that Chapman mentioned obese and sexually reckless people as other bad examples who
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