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CHEVILLY-LARUE, France (Reuters) – When French doctor Christian Chenay saw his first patients in 1951, penicillin was state of the art.
French doctor Christian Chenay, 98 years-old, treats a patient in his consulting room in Chevilly-Larue near Paris, France, November 20, 2019. Picture taken November 20, 2019. REUTERS/Charles Platiau
Now 98 years old, he is still working and opens his surgery in the Paris suburbs two mornings a week for patients, some of whom he has treated for decades.
With no health woes of his own – he doesn’t even wear glasses during his consultations – Chenay said a quiet retirement had no appeal.
“If you’re over 60 they put you with the old people. One day you’ve got cards, the next day bingo, then there’s sudoku… With all that you become a complete idiot. I’m better off being a doctor!”
Originally from Angers in western France, Chenay worked as a welder before becoming a doctor, ultimately qualifying as a radiologist before moving back into general practice.
His surgery does not look high tech – there is a fax machine but no computer on the desk – but Chenay says he keeps up to date with all the latest developments via his subscriptions to online medical journals.
He says a new development in his nearly seven-decade career is patients who erroneously diagnose themselves on the internet and then turn up at his surgery demanding drugs.
Many of his patients say they struggle to get appointments in Chevilly-Larue, which has three doctors for a population of 19,000, so they queue early to see Chenay who runs a drop-in surgery, promising to see the first 20 patients who sign up.
“(In France) we have the doctors, we have the sick people, but to bring the people together is really not easy,” he said.
French President Emmanuel Macron has faced months of unrest from hospital workers angry about tough working conditions and underinvestment, and Chenay said he had never seen a worse crisis in the sector.
The average retirement age for doctors in France is 67 and Chenay’s son, who also practiced as one, has already given up work.
But Chenay does not see himself stopping.
“If you sit and watch TV all day you switch off pretty quickly, your head doesn’t last long.”
Reporting by Clotaire Achi, Writing by John Cotton; Editing by Gareth Jones
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