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G**F
Succinct and compelling
A fantastic essay on the art of medical practice. I gave it as a gift to my friends in medical fields and they all loved it. It's also really short so even busy clinicians had time to read it. I could imagine this being a fantastic gift for anyone striving to practice medicine, go into nursing, or do meaningful biomedical science.
P**E
Slight but worthwhile
Beautifully crafted in the Mukherjee way with important insights about the all-too-human limits of medical science. The short text doesn’t justify the ambitious title.
C**R
Short and insightful
This book is a great read, especially for those work in more black and white fields like IT. A lot of careful work goes into medicine, but it is not engineering. muhkerjee writes with a wonderful flowing style that makes the material a joy to read.
J**C
A Great Read
The book provides an interesting history of medicine and the major players who helped it mature during the 1950s.
R**T
Short, pricey, stimulating
I bought this book immediately after the interview with Eric Topol. I had loved the Emperor of all Maladies and bought copies, hardcover, for friends and family. For a non oncologist physician and a lover of history, retired, the history of the war on cancer and the complex new genetics applications were wonderful. I had hoped this book would be the same. Isn't . I read House Of God, briefly mentioned in book and interview, when it was published. Had hoped the Laws would discuss those laws as well as ones newly formulated. I too read Lewis Thomas and Osler trying to understand medicine as a science and an art.I join with the critic who noted cost is outlandish for a tiny book filled with blank pages. TED talks are regularly pleasing, but in their brevity leave the listener eager to read more or think harder. Perhaps the book can do same, but looking at the conclusions makes me wonder if a medical student can learn.Bytes theorem is a magnificent application of an old theory, one where the mathematical statistics have been replaced by its function on common sense rules. Would that we could apply decision making to the complex formula or easily recognize when tests are not valuable, such as PSA or mammograms. Statistics in medicine are often bad statistics or unusable ones. Outcome studies require sufficient numbers to have power and so often there are more variables which may impact outcomes that are not able to be evaluated. Informed decision making is difficult.So it is with insight. The cognitive scientists and psychologists as well as philosophers have rediscovered David Hume where his idea of reason being led by passion helps us understand why groups or tribes or clans defy pure reason and act poorly. In making medical diagnosis intuition is often experience, experience not formulated or conscious. One of my friends a long time ER doc could tell sick from non sick. Years of experience warned him.Years ago I ran a clinic for the penurious and staffed orthopedic residents. A case referred to clinic by a family practitioner for severe back pain was seen by a host of residents and short white coats who by intuition realized the man was a drug user and he simply wanted medication. Writhing in pain, I said no he is infected. Judgment of the profile and social status of patients sometimes over rules attentiveness to quality of pain. In orthopedics spine surgery it is not unusual to have patients where infection is the diagnosis but because of other issues is missed.None of us can write a flow chart or "scientific" method of figuring out whether one has disease or not. Perhaps Watson will. Students need to know there are outliers, and his rounds for outliers is significant to teach those learning that exam is more than a lab test or a scan. His recollection of the old skilled surgeon training residents in the o.r. brings back memories. So, the physician who had a list of seemingly unrelated questions which could help him sort out complex problems efficiently. Marvelous.I cannot wait for his book on genetics. Any author who takes the time to go see where the monk, Mendel, worked has done his homework. And he writes with style and in prose easily understood.This tiny book should stimulate readers to read more, such as the Stanford article on Bayes' theorem.
S**I
Philosophy of medicine.
The author shares the physicians view of medicine. I do not argue with the simplicity ofThe book, because many people ignore simple things though they may be significant.What I feel is going on in North American medicine is the following:Doctors can get sued, they need expensive insurance. Residency is practically institutionalizedHazing. Middle class people cannot become doctors because it costs too much in timeAnd money.Despite all of this, some people still go through with this process. There is privilege andRespect in a licence to practice medicine.So what is wrong with the medical profession today?Just as in the Trump presidency, the masses or the silent majority have voted with theirWallet. Acupuncture and TCM is not unheard of in Canada nowadays, neither isAyurvedic medicine, thanks to the simplified works of a certain Dr Deepak Chopra.I predict that if mainstream doctors do not accept these trends, they will earn even lessIn the future./END DIATRIBE
A**R
Medical Expectations.
Interesting perspective on the status of medical research. It provides a realistic view of medicine as a science which enables one to have better expectations on treatment. Medicine is not an exact science yet many of us view it as such. However, progress is being made toward that direction. I look forward to a follow on a few years from now.
P**C
Mukherjee is a cleat writer - with a good sense of humor - who clearly understands medicine
Mukherjee is a cleat writer - with a good sense of humor - who clearly understands medicine, and not just in the doctor / oncologist sense. He's able to back off and look at the field from the outside. This is an absolutely first-rate book, and I'd almost say a necessary read if you or a loved one is facing extensive medical care. I've been there (unfortunately), and this book absolutely hit the nail on the head.
C**A
Super recomendable
El libro es cortito pero muy interesante
J**E
A must read to understand what medicine really is about
We have grown accustomed to assuming that medicine is an exact science. This book explains with great examples that it's much more complex a profession.
T**I
perfetto
regalato a mio figlio
N**A
Utterly true
A concise, engaging and well-written thesis on some of the key principles of medicine, integrating wider aspects of science and clinical examples. As a medical student I found it pithily relevant to the profession which I am stepping into and a must read for fellow medics.
D**R
Essential reading for everyone, patient and doctor alike. An interesting discourse on an inexact science.
To start off, this is a short, small book. It's also written for a general public. It's also not definitive, because we can't be definitive about this subject. Having said all that, it's a great book!I was trained as a research oncologist and stay current with the medical literature, but one of the tough aspects of that profession is explaining to people why they have developed a particular disease, why we don't know that much about it, and what might (or might not) help. Hope is something that's dangerous: hope can help heal, but hope can be dashed with consequences for the patient. Knowing what information to give someone, and how to phrase it, is a crucial if awkward part of any doctor's job. More than anything, this is a book that tries to explain, in layman terms (without being too simplistic or condescending) why we don't know as much as we should.This book is wide-ranging, covering subjects from history to philosophy, and how they overlap with the medical world. More than anything, this is a book about why "average" or "typical" isn't average or typical, and doesn't help science as much as the exceptions or outliers do. There's some interesting concepts brought up in the process, all of which are thought-provoking. I'm not going to go into detail on the contents of the book, simply because this is a book that's easy and fast to read, and reading it is an important aspect of the process of understanding the subject.This isn't just informative for non-medical people; this should be read by every doctor or researcher. Reading helps clarify some of the issues we encounter, and how best to broach them.
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