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Paperback Equal Partners: A Physician's Call for a New Spirit of Medicine Book

ISBN: 0812217330

ISBN13: 9780812217339

Equal Partners: A Physician's Call for a New Spirit of Medicine

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Book Overview

One week after graduating with honors from Harvard Medical School, Jody Heymann woke up in an emergency room with no memory of how she got there, and, within hours, was turned from physician into patient. The hospitalization and brain surgery that followed taught her more about the practice of medicine in America than all her years of schooling. Her deeply disturbing conclusion: patients all too often occupy the bottom rung of the ladder, with their...

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Read this book, doctor or patient.

My neurologist gave me his copy of this book to read before I had brain surgery 13 years ago. He was a classmate of Dr. Heymann at Harvard Medical School, and informed me that the book is required reading for medical students at Harvard. The story begins when Dr. Heymann experiences a seizure just after graduating from Medical School at Harvard. Despite her own medical training, she finds herself in a completely new world as she and her husband, also a doctor, struggle to find out what has happened to her. As a patient, she finds out what it means to be kept in the dark about your condition. Not only does she offer her well written personal story of frustration and perserverance, but she provides top notch advice to patients and doctors on how to effectively work together in the best interest of the patient. I found it to be extremely helpful as someone diagnosed with epilepsy myself who was considering seizure surgery. Now, thirteen years later, I can apply the same principals to the doctors with whom I must cooperate because I now have cancer. The principal of "Equal Partners" is crucial to establishing an effective course of action in any health care crisis.

A must read for humanity

Anyone who uses the American health care system or works in it should read this book. This story of a Harvard doctor with a brain tumor shows why there is so much needless suffering within our health care system. It's not going to start getting better unless we all look at the problem and do our part to fix it.

Medicine from the inside, and it's not pretty

Despite its bland title this is a harrowing expose of the relationship between doctors, hospitals and patients. It's also a moving personal story about catastrophe, agonizing recovery and adjustment.A week after graduating with honors from Harvard Medical School, Heymann suffered a severe seizure and was rushed to the emergency room. Awakening with no memory of the event, she found her arms and legs strapped to a hard slab. Unable to move, surrounded by strangers, she was terrified and kept calling for her husband, wondering what "they" had done to him. No one answered her cries.And this was only the beginning. As Heymann describes the nightmare of awaiting diagnosis, clinging to the stoicism she learned as a medical student - good patients are quiet patients - she begins to understand that hospitals are constructed around the convenience of the professionals. She reflects on the small things that might ease a patient's anxiety - knowledge mostly. Explanations about what is happening and what they can expect of themselves on release.Heymann had bled into her brain and surgery was recommended. The operation was botched, through medical oversight, but Heymann's anger about this is less than her anger at the lies, evasions and brush-offs which follow. After numerous conflicting reports, her doctor tells her the hemangioma had all been removed. But one of the books most chilling passages comes later. The pathologist's study concluded that her hemangioma had not been removed. Her doctor never informed her of this report (she does not say how she learned of it).Discharged after surgery, Heymann is so weak that watching television is too taxing and caring for her toddler son is impossible. No one was prepared for the sort of care she would need. And Heymann herself refuses to compromise her ambitions. She believes strongly that meaning in life comes from helping others. She and her husband (also a doctor) had always intended to work in a clinic in a third world country. They also want a second child.So she embarks on her grueling internship as soon as possible, terrified of the seizures which may wreck her career. Numerous heart-tugging case histories are interspersed with her own halting progress. Explaining procedures and home care to her patients, she shows how the frightened "difficult" patients are calmed and easier to treat when given a modicum of understanding.This well-written, moving and deeply scary memoir should be widely read but probably won't be. In a letter Heymann wrote to the New England Journal of Medicine protesting prejudice against people with seizures she described herself as "a physician who has both treated patients with seizures and lived with seizures." The Journal removed only four words. "They would not print that I had lived with seizures, only that I had treated others."
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