"We are ready to commit ourselves." Mere declaration of intent or desire on the part of the new President of the National Union of liberal doctors (UNML) Rémi Pellet, Professor of law and Director of studies at Sciences po Paris who knows well, Jean Marty is not in "the incantation", unlike some of its Trade Union counterparts. On the contrary, he "seeks to understand the arguments of others" and attempts to "reflect on the merits of the problem".
Gynaecologist-obstetrician born in 1950 in the region of Castres and engaged over the past 20 years in trade unionism, especially to the Syngof (national Union of gynaecologists-obstetricians of France), Jean Marty drawn to question "the inability of the French company to be lucid" on the economic dimension of public health. Under a stable peace, real tension is felt in the evocation of this topic. The absence of speakers clearly identified on the guardianship the puts out of it "I has me with public authorities in the same way as in an operating room: must keep a cool head, act with precision", replied the practitioner, who admits sometimes having to "play the game of anger".

Because, readily assuming responsibility of the medical community in the current situation, Jean Marty waits for policy and decision makers of rationality to problems. A requirement deeply rooted in him, because very early instilled by her parents. Teachers of modest condition fed to the values of the third Republic, they have "real social elevator elevator" summer for their students as for their children. At the age of seven, his meeting with surgeon marks it deeply. At the time, analysis, the general perception was that "doctors could change the fate, that it was people who were good." Added to this worship that involved his mother at what was medical, the young Bachelor chooses almost as evidence the Faculty of medicine. With the "terrible not fail will". Opting for Obstetrics and gynaecology because, modest and prudent, it was "not sure to be able" to become a surgeon. But also by the fascination for the Act of giving life.
A true moral conscience
When in 1982 he became Deputy of Albi hospital hospital practitioner, there arises the question of the private sector. "They did not to pay the health", he thought so. But three years of hospital practice are radically changing its vision of the public sector. "The hospital is not at all instead of recognition of merit", deplored the fact that that was precisely "educated in this worship there. Pointing the time lag between the speech focused on the patient, and reality, with the beautiful part to political manoeuvres and careerism. Because the practitioner must first be in the service of patients, says the man who "does not sacrifice his trade to trade unionism", to which he devotes only a small part of his time. Its essential concern: "Help patients keep their freedom against the disease", do "whatever life dominates. Jean Marty: a doctor "discrete, discreet but warm, which has a true moral conscience", by Rémi Pellet.