Trust Me, I'm a Doctor was originally a BBC Two television programme looking at the state of health care in Britain with a combination of factual reporting and satire, presented by Phil Hammond.
In 2013, a new BBC Two television series with the same name was launched, presented by a team comprising: medical journalist Michael Mosley, physicians Chris van Tulleken and Saleyha Ahsan and surgeon Gabriel Weston.
The series was broadcast after Hammond assisted in exposing systemic problems in the NHS that led to poor results for child heart surgery in Britain.
[2] The series website provides links and further information to allow viewers to read the evidence for themselves in more depth.
You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This article relating to a non-fiction television series in the United Kingdom is a stub.