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DO NO HARM: The diaries of a 'vaccinated' anti-vaxxer

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WARNING! TROLLS MAY SPIKE THE REVIEWS FOR DO NO HARM

These diaries reflect Dr David Cartlands experience during the COVID-19 pandemic, which he refers to as a ‘scamdemic.’


He argues that governments, media, and pharmaceutical companies orchestrated a fear-driven response that destroyed trust in medicine, inflicted psychological and economic harm, and promoted what some term experimental vaccines that he views as unsafe. He is a courageous whistleblower who risked his career by questioning the official narrative, all the while remaining committed to the Hippocratic oath, patient safety, and the guiding principle of Do No Harm.

Alongside his experience of institutional corruption and censorship, he recounts his personal journey into his working-class upbringing, determination to study biomedical science and medicine, and eventual qualification as a GP. He highlights the contrast between the ideals that motivated him to become a doctor and the professional culture of conformity, silencing, and complicity that enabled a global medical catastrophe.

This book seeks to document Dr Cartlands frontline perspective and how his search for truth led to him being struck off the UK medical register.

183 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 3, 2025

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Dr David Cartland

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126 reviews
November 12, 2025
This book represents a bitter outcry from a onetime general practitioner in the U.K., David Cartland, who was struck off the medical register over transgressions including online harassment and giving faked Covid vaccine exemptions. A lengthy history of online bigotry probably didn't help matters.

In spite of ample evidence presented at his General Medical Council hearing (which he didn't attend), Cartland insists that he's being persecuted for protesting pandemic measures, especially vaccines, and believes that the vast majority of the medical profession and not he are culpable.

It's worth noting that trialsitenews, a website that promotes pseudoscientific antivaccine views and has been highly critical of the pandemic response, recently reviewed "Do No Harm", and while the review is sympathetic to Cartland's angst, it says the book unravels over questionable claims and outright falsehoods.

"The book becomes most alarming when Cartland veers into fringe territory—hinting at elite cabals, vaccine magnetism, and even doubting the virus’s existence altogether. These views are not simply controversial; they are demonstrably false. That he was eventually struck off the UK medical register in 2025 was not, as he frames it, a heroic martyrdom for truth, but the culmination of a pattern of online harassment, threats, and factually incorrect public health messaging."

When trialsitenews thinks you've gone off the rails, it should be a warning sign.

Potential readers who value science-based views will probably roll their eyes at yet another conspiracy-ridden diatribe against vaccines and shadowy powers that seek to obscure The Truth. Others will find in it vindication of their own views and may buy it out of sympathy or to add to their collection of similar nonsense.

Props to the author for the message heading the Goodreads blurb on the book, which warns of "trolls" negatively reviewing the book. If you do look behind the curtain, you'll find the sad case of a once useful physician who sacrificed his career for a spectacularly bad cause.
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