Submitted by moneyforsoy t3_1132rz6 in books
Full title is Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End. This book is written by Dr. Atul Gawande who is a surgeon and public health researcher. He has written a couple of books on his experience as a surgeon, and I’ve read most of them, but Being Mortal has haunted me every day since I first listened to the audiobook. It’s an overarching look at elderly people and geriatric care. It covers everything from nursing homes, long term care facilities, assisted living, and the decisions we make regarding healthcare of those who are old or close to the death. It may sound dry, but Gawande is an incredible writer with an honest outlook and personal accounts that make the work flow.
I work in a hospital laboratory and recently started doing microbiology work after having been a phlebotomist for a couple of years. Leaving direct patient care has been vital for me because I couldn’t emotionally handle the things I was party to. I’m not talking about gory traumas or stinky C. diff patients, but elderly people who are utterly miserable and being subjected to more testing and surgeries just to prolong their suffering. Reading this book has opened my eyes to how and why this happens to a very vulnerable population that almost all of us will become part of one day.
I recommend this book to everyone I work with. To anyone who has an elderly relative. To anyone who is going be elderly eventually. So, everyone. This book addresses how medial advancements have allowed people to live much, much longer, but at what cost?
I’ve always been interested in mortality and how different cultures view it and this book is the most comprehensive overview of American and modern healthcare and how we, as a society, treat our elderly. This book alone inspired me to go back to school and become a palliative care doctor.
So, yeah, you should read this!
mrnatural18 t1_j8nlz2i wrote
This book is great. Well written and very illuminating.
If you are older than 55, if you have a relative older than 55, or if you work in a helping profession you should read this book now. Everyone else can read it next week.