Author: Dean-David Schillinger
Published: July 16, 2024 by PublicAffairs
Format: Kindle, Hardcover 368 Pages
Genre: Medical History
Source: My thanks to Netgalley and the Publisher for the opportunity to read an advanced copy of this book.
First Sentence: Prologue: At the peak of my career as a physician, modern medicine nearly killed me.
Blurb: A doctor's powerful meditation on what his patients taught him and what they can teach us about health, empathy and healing. For over four decades, Dr. Dean-David Schillinger has been a witness to the evolution of public health in America. From his days as a young, bright eyed resident to the Chief of Internal Medicine at one of the country's largest public hospitals, Schillinger has seen thousands of patients and observed how our healthcare system can both work for and against them. Yet, it wasn't insurance or improved medical tests that mattered most; it was simply listening to his patients. In Telltale Hearts, Schillinger takes readers into the exam rooms of a public hospital as he recounts his various experiences with patients and how listening to their stories, their backgrounds and more, revolutionized his own approach to medicine. In a hospital that serves mostly low income and marginalized populations, it was never just the injury or ailment that was the whole story but rather the social, political and racial circumstances that led patients to the hospital in the first place. A woman who refuses to take her pills actually cannot swallow them to begin with while another who seems to be skipping her insulin injections has a family member who is stealing them. A patient with Type 2 diabetes doesn't just suffer from high blood sugar but has consistently lived in a food desert where sugary beverages and unhealthy food were the only options. With each story and each patient, Schillinger urges us to look at how listening to patients not only can lead to better care in a hospital, but a more empathetic approach to public health in general. Written with compassion and introspection, Telltale Hearts is a moving portrait of modern medicine and an urgent call for change in how we, as a society, take care of our own. (GoodReads)
My Opinion: This book constantly went off the rails. I was expecting a narrative epidemiology to literally be the stories of the patients. Those that have been in the trenches of a bad health care system that kept them fighting for any scrap of help. Burdened by a public health care system that tries to make up for the larger well insured populace and hospitals with their shiny floors and new equipment; Dean-David Schillinger tries to tell the stories of those most effected by a myopic system.
When the author can stay focused and not branching off on his narcissistic “I” narratives, there are fascinating stories being told. The people and what their environments subject them to, tell a shocking, but then again, the reader shouldn’t be shocked, accounts of how poverty, skin color, lack of education, drug abuse, food deserts, and held captive at the whims of big business, dictate their lives.
Schillinger tried to put too many books into this one novel. Tell the public health story, tell the big business story, tell the holocaust story, just don’t tell them all within the same book all the while peppering the reader with your self-aggrandizing side stories.
Blurb: A doctor's powerful meditation on what his patients taught him and what they can teach us about health, empathy and healing. For over four decades, Dr. Dean-David Schillinger has been a witness to the evolution of public health in America. From his days as a young, bright eyed resident to the Chief of Internal Medicine at one of the country's largest public hospitals, Schillinger has seen thousands of patients and observed how our healthcare system can both work for and against them. Yet, it wasn't insurance or improved medical tests that mattered most; it was simply listening to his patients. In Telltale Hearts, Schillinger takes readers into the exam rooms of a public hospital as he recounts his various experiences with patients and how listening to their stories, their backgrounds and more, revolutionized his own approach to medicine. In a hospital that serves mostly low income and marginalized populations, it was never just the injury or ailment that was the whole story but rather the social, political and racial circumstances that led patients to the hospital in the first place. A woman who refuses to take her pills actually cannot swallow them to begin with while another who seems to be skipping her insulin injections has a family member who is stealing them. A patient with Type 2 diabetes doesn't just suffer from high blood sugar but has consistently lived in a food desert where sugary beverages and unhealthy food were the only options. With each story and each patient, Schillinger urges us to look at how listening to patients not only can lead to better care in a hospital, but a more empathetic approach to public health in general. Written with compassion and introspection, Telltale Hearts is a moving portrait of modern medicine and an urgent call for change in how we, as a society, take care of our own. (GoodReads)
My Opinion: This book constantly went off the rails. I was expecting a narrative epidemiology to literally be the stories of the patients. Those that have been in the trenches of a bad health care system that kept them fighting for any scrap of help. Burdened by a public health care system that tries to make up for the larger well insured populace and hospitals with their shiny floors and new equipment; Dean-David Schillinger tries to tell the stories of those most effected by a myopic system.
When the author can stay focused and not branching off on his narcissistic “I” narratives, there are fascinating stories being told. The people and what their environments subject them to, tell a shocking, but then again, the reader shouldn’t be shocked, accounts of how poverty, skin color, lack of education, drug abuse, food deserts, and held captive at the whims of big business, dictate their lives.
Schillinger tried to put too many books into this one novel. Tell the public health story, tell the big business story, tell the holocaust story, just don’t tell them all within the same book all the while peppering the reader with your self-aggrandizing side stories.
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