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Being mortal : illness, medicine and what matters in the end

By: Publication details: Profile Books 2014 LondonDescription: 282 P. HardISBN:
  • 9780670086061
Subject(s):
Contents:
The independent self -- Things fall apart -- Dependence -- Assistance -- A better life -- Letting go -- Hard conversations -- Courage.
Summary: Doctors are trained to keep their patients alive as long as possible. But they are never taught how to prepare people to die. And yet for many patients, particularly the old and terminally ill, death is a question of when, not if. Should the medical profession rethink its approach to them? And in what way? With aging populations and hospital costs rising globally, these questions have become increasingly relevant. In his new book, Atul Gawande argues that an acceptance of mortality must lie at the center of the way we treat the dying. Using his experiences (and missteps) as a surgeon, comparing attitudes towards aging and death in the West and in India and drawing a powerful portrait of his father’s final years-a doctor who chose how he should go – Gawande has produced a work that is not only an extraordinary account of loss but one whose ideas are truly important. Questioning, profound and deeply moving, Being Mortal is a masterpiece.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book Main Library ON SHELF PHARMACEUT 615 / Gaw/ 29878 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 11129878
Total holds: 0
Browsing Main Library shelves, Shelving location: ON SHELF Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
615/ Bha/ 31584 Pharmaceutical technology : 615/ Cha/ 31585 Pharmaceutical analysis 615/ Fri/Fur/ 30444 Fundamentals of clinical trials 615 / Gaw/ 29878 Being mortal : 615/ Mcf/ 31586 Introducing pharmacology: 615/ Pan/Dim/ 30498 An Introduction to Drug Design

The independent self --
Things fall apart --
Dependence --
Assistance --
A better life --
Letting go --
Hard conversations --
Courage.

Doctors are trained to keep their patients alive as long as possible. But they are never taught how to prepare people to die. And yet for many patients, particularly the old and terminally ill, death is a question of when, not if. Should the medical profession rethink its approach to them? And in what way? With aging populations and hospital costs rising globally, these questions have become increasingly relevant. In his new book, Atul Gawande argues that an acceptance of mortality must lie at the center of the way we treat the dying. Using his experiences (and missteps) as a surgeon, comparing attitudes towards aging and death in the West and in India and drawing a powerful portrait of his father’s final years-a doctor who chose how he should go – Gawande has produced a work that is not only an extraordinary account of loss but one whose ideas are truly important. Questioning, profound and deeply moving, Being Mortal is a masterpiece.

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