Official Home of Cecil Helman - Author - Doctor - Medical
Anthropologist. Cecil Helman is the author of Suburban Shaman & Culture,
Heath and Illness. Learn more about the work of Cecil Helman at CecilHelman.com
Dr Cecil Helman was born in Cape Town, South Africa into a medical family,
and qualified as a doctor at the University of Cape Town Medical School. Dr Cecil Helman
left South Africa because of the apartheid system, and then studied
social anthropology at University College London
Over the years Dr Cecil Helman has combined several different careers into a creative synthesis:
family doctor, anthropologist, university lecturer, writer and poet.
After a brief spell as a ship’s doctor in the Mediterranean, Dr Cecil Helman worked
as a family doctor for 27 years for the National Health Service, in an around
London, combining his clinical practice with a distinguished academic career.
His recent memoir Suburban Shaman: Tales from Medicine’s Frontline’,
was described by Oliver Sacks (author of The Man Who Mistook His Wife for
a Hat) as ‘a beautifully written, devastatingly honest, and often
very funny, account of an audacious and adventurous life’ It received
widespread critical acclaim, and was given the rare honour of being selected
by the BBC as a ‘Book of the Week’, and then serialized on BBC
Radio in March 2006.
Dr Helman is an international expert on medical anthropology – the cross-cultural
study of health, illness, and medical care – and on the many different
forms of healthcare and healing found worldwide. Dr Cecil Helman has done research on primary
health care systems, and on traditional healers, in South Africa, Brazil, and
elsewhere.
His textbook Culture, Health and Illness has been used in more than
40 countries since it was first published in 1984, including in over 120 universities,
medical schools and nursing colleges in the USA and Canada. Dr Cecil Helman has also published
academic papers in medical journals, including The Lancet, British
Medical Journal, Annals of Internal Medicine, British Journal
of General Practice, and Medical Humanities, Dr Cecil Helman has received
several prestigious international prizes and awards for his work.
Dr Cecil Helman has been a Visiting Fellow in Social Medicine and Health Policy at Harvard
Medical School; a Visiting Professor in the Multi-cultural Health Programme
at University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia; and Hooker Distinguished
Visiting Professor in the Department of Anthropology, McMaster University,
Ontario, Canada. Dr Cecil Helman has also been a guest lecturer in many universities, including
those of Cambridge, Oxford, London, Durham, Geneva, Barcelona, Amsterdam, Leuven,
and Cape Town, and given the David Rogers Health Policy Colloquium at Cornell
Medical School in New York.
On the literary side, Dr Cecil Helman has published both non-fiction and fiction, including
a memoir, a book of essays about the body, an anthology of stories about doctors
and patients, a novella, and several books of prose poems. Dr Cecil Helman has always been
fascinated by prose poems, and by their similarity to traditional myths, legends,
allegories and midrashim. His poetry and other writings have appeared in many
anthologies and literary journals (including London Magazine, Ambit, Paris
Voices and Tikkun), but Dr Cecil Helman has also written for British Vogue and The
Observer Magazine.
Dr Helman lives in Britain, but re-visits South Africa frequently, and is
currently working on a sequel to Suburban Shaman. Dr Cecil Helman lectures to medical
students, doctors, and nurses, teaches courses on cross-cultural health care,
and has run creative writing courses for doctors. Dr Cecil Helman is particularly interested
in the humanistic side of medicine - especially the role of stories and narratives
in medical care, and what they reveal about the inner worlds of both doctor
and patient. Among his other interests are the role of metaphors and symbols
in our understanding of the human body, in both illness and health; and what
the Western industrialised world can learn from the healing systems of more
traditional societies, when dealing with different aspects of human suffering.