Hospital: Man, Woman, Birth, Death, Infinity, Plus Red Tape, Bad Behavior, Money, God and Diversity on ... | Julie Salamon | A powerful case study of our baffling health care system
books:
Hospital: Man, Wom...
Hospital: Man, Woman, Birth, Death, Infinity, Plus Red Tape, Bad Behavior, Money, God and Diversity on ...
Julie Salamon
Penguin Press HC, The
, 2008 - 384 pages
average customer review:
based on 24 reviews
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highly recommended
Awesome Book, Read it One Sitting
Ok so maybe I am a little biased because I actually work at the
hospital
where this book was conceived and written.
Seriously though, Ms. Salamon has has
man
ged somehow to give an overview of Maimonides Hospital in Brooklyn that is both accurate and wonderfully descriptive. She has succesfully captu
red
the flavour of Brooklyn and Maimonides in an entertaining yet authentic way.
This is not one of those PR stunts to try make Maimonides famous and rich, rather it is a soul searching account of the most horrendous and uplifting experiences that go hand in hand when an urban hospital meets multiple cultures.
At the end of the day it is a book about human emotions and human deficiencies.
Ego and humility, arrogance and compassion mixed with a healthy dose of back stabbing and genuine love for humanity.
Highly recomended.
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A powerful case study of our baffling health care system
That Maimonides Medical Center granted this writer such unfette
red
access to the institution is indeed astonishing, and Salamon does not squander the opportunity. What she finds is a health care pressure cooker: Ludicrous insurance protocols, cultural divides among patients and an exhausted staff prone to ego and petty feuds, and sometimes profound compassion.
But General
Hospital
melodrama the book is not. What I found instead was an illuminating portrayal of our broken health care system, without the gross oversimplification that presidential political campaigns are apt to use in endless sound bytes.
Salamon's prose is at its best when she documents the experience of Maimonides cancer patients--real people in pain, often lacking insurance and citizenship, praying for miracles and avoiding the awful truth as best they can. Salamon thankfully avoids turning these tragic stories into overwrought narrative thread. Her voice is simple and frank, and therefore irresistible. A powerful work.
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Send Me the Sequel
I purchased this book for my children to give to their father on Father's Day. He trained at Maimonides when we were newlyweds and I thought he would enjoy receiving it from his sons who were born there in Brooklyn.
I began to glance through it and I was compelled to cancel my appointments and read it completely. Wow, the memories came flooding back to me.
In the early and mid eighties, we spent a great deal of time interacting with a group of people who were foreign to me in both physical and spiritual identity. The Orthodox Jewish community provides an integral part of her story and it is fascinating.
Like the author, I am from Ohio. But, unlike Ms Salamon, I had no idea who Maimonides was and why would he have a
hospital
in Brooklyn named for him? It was a life-altering experience for me to learn the differences between various New York cultures and and this is the insight Ms Salamon provides throughout this book.
The reader becomes enthralled with the personalities of the physicians, administrators and staff and Ms Salamon is concise and accurate in recalling events that establish their identities. However, it is the wrenching descriptions of actual procedures as well as the reactions of young and terminally ill patients that keeps this book from becoming another hospital tell-all.
I am very impressed with this book and I greatly anticipate reading her earlier books and essays.
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I've read all...
...Julie Salamon's nonfiction writing, beginning with The Devil's Candy - still the best book about movie making I've ever read, and including her memoir about her parents' Holocaust experiences and emigration to the US, The Net of Dreams.
Salamon's writing is first-rate. The first three reviewers of this book - who also gave her five stars - actually describe the book better than I can.
Salamon is a truly "easy" writer. Reading her non-fiction is a true pleasure.
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