On the Couch

Dr David McGrath , director of college health service at Trinity College Dublin.

Dr David McGrath, director of college health service at Trinity College Dublin.

Personal/family:Married to Siobhan with three sons.

What figure from the world of medicine or health do you most admire?

On a personal basis I admire my first mentor, Gerry Mulcahy, consultant surgeon in Bantry, who was a single-handed practitioner in west Cork for many years. Also on a personal level I admire a colleague from Edinburgh, Dr Bill Donovan, for being a great source of inspiration to all the practitioners in the university.

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What other career might you have chosen?

A vet - it was a last minute decision, using a change-of-mind CAO form, to become a doctor.

If you could grant three wishes for the health service, what would they be?

I would ensure that all students have a medical card. I find it bizarre that adults from the age of 18-25 continue to be assessed on their parents' income. I would also continue the work of David Thomas and Sinead O'Brien in progressing the development of college health services at Trinity. Finally, I would see that an adequate number of modern well-staffed nursing home beds are created in the community.

What is your greatest fear?

Illness in my children.

Have you ever been a patient and were you a good one?

I was a patient for short while with a back injury and in general I took the advice of the experts.

When or where are you happiest?

Having time with my family and watching my boys play football.

How do you cope with stress?

I play golf and I get free psychotherapy from my wife, who is a consultant psychiatrist.

What is the trait you most admire in yourself?

I am decisive.

What is the trait you most dislike in yourself?

If I am not interested in a particular topic I tend to procrastinate and put it on the long finger.

Do you use alternative or complementary medicine or therapies?

I use acupuncture and I go to a chiropractor.

Who or what makes you laugh?

Billy Connolly and politicians jumping on the health bandwagon when really the problem is with core infrastructure.

What is your motto?

Take dead aim - it's a motto for golf and life.

What is your favourite TV or radio programme?

I love watching sport. I really enjoy Fawlty Towers and Prime Time. On radio I loved Home Truths by the late John Peel.

What books would you bring to a desert island?

Flann O'Brien's Third Policeman and Dalkey Archive. A collection of Ian Rankin to remind me of Edinburgh and Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights.

In conversation with Fiona Tyrrell