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Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End by Atul Gawande

02 Monday Mar 2015

Posted by Weston Public Library Staff in Non-fiction

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attitudes to death, doctors, older people, physiology of aging, prognosis, quality of life, terminal care

9780805095159_p0_v3_s114x166I have enjoyed every book that Dr. Gawande has written. This is his best yet.  Gawande is a MacArthur fellow, New Yorker staff writer, and surgeon at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.  Here he tackles the shortcomings of his own profession when dealing with the old and frail, as well as those suddenly confronted with terminal decisions.  Doctors can offer hope almost at every turn, but when the number of days our loved ones have left are fewer than we ever imagine, medical decisions can often worsen one’s quality of life. A must-read for our loved ones and ourselves.

“Doctors don’t listen, Gawande suggests—or, more accurately, they don’t know what to listen for. (Gawande includes examples of his own failings in this area.) Besides, they’ve been trained to want to find cures, attack problems—to win. But victory doesn’t look the same to everyone, he asserts. Yes, “death is the enemy,” he writes. “But the enemy has superior forces. Eventually, it wins. And in a war that you cannot win, you don’t want a general who fights to the point of total annihilation. You don’t want Custer. You want Robert E. Lee… someone who knows how to fight for territory that can be won and how to surrender it when it can’t.” In his compassionate, learned way, Gawande shows all of us—doctors included—how mortality must be faced, with both heart and mind. – Sara Nelson

“I never expected that among the most meaningful experiences I’d have as a doctor—and, really, as a human being—would come from helping others deal with what medicine cannot do as well as what it can,” [Gawande] writes. Being Mortal uses a clear, illuminating style to describe the medical facts and cases that have brought him to that understanding. The New York Times – Janet Maslin

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Complications: A Surgeon’s Notes on an Imperfect Science by Atul Gawande

18 Monday Aug 2014

Posted by Weston Public Library Staff in Biography, Non-fiction

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anecdotes, doctors, medical care, medical sciences, surgery, true cases

9780312421700_p0_v2_s114x166

Let this author take you into the surgeon’s ampitheatre where he boldly confronts the conflicts and uncertainties of his profession.   Why would you want to embark on this journey?  Because it is Atul Gawande,  MacArthur fellow and New Yorker staff writer, as deft with pen as he is with the scalpel. The chapters just easily unfold as he unflinchingly reveals mistakes that prove deadly, confronts mysterious syndromes, and shares with us the fallibility, mysteries, and uncertainties that he sees every day.

“None surpass Gawande in the ability to create a sense of immediacy, in his power to conjure the reality of the ward, the thrill of the moment-by-moment medical or surgical drama. Complications impresses for its truth and authenticity, virtues that it owes to its author being as much forceful writer as uncompromising chronicler.” —The New York Times Book Review

“Complications is a book about medicine that reads like a thriller. Every subject Atul Gawande touches is probed and dissected and turned inside out with such deftness and feeling and counterintuitive insight that the reader is left breathless.” —Malcolm Gladwell, author of The Tipping Point

 “Gawande’s prose, much like the scalpel he wields, is precise, daring, but never reckless….Much like reading George Orwell, the reader emerges entertained, enlightened, transformed and immensely satisfied.” —Abraham Verghese, author of My Own Country and The Tennis Partner

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