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What has subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH) got to do with neurology? Not a lot in almost every UK centre, and nor in many non-UK centres either. It does not fit the slow stream don’t-bother-to-phone-me-at-home style of neurologist who is wrestling with his bow tie while dressing for dinner. This is nonsense. Some years ago in Edinburgh it dawned on us that no-one was really looking after the SAH patients anymore. The neurosurgeons had lost interest because they almost never were doing any operations and yet the patients were in their beds, and being bossed around by neurointerventionists, who were after all only boys with toys, was …
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