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BOOK
REVIEW
Better: A
Surgeon's Notes on Performance
by Atul
Gawande
Metropolitan Books - April
2007
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Reviewed by Dr. Jonathan Dolhenty
Atul Gawande is a general surgeon at the Brigham
and Women's Hospital in Boston and -- from
everything I've heard and read about him recently
-- one of the best of the new breed of medical
writers who devote their prose to informing the
general public about important concerns in the
world of medicine. If this new book, Better: A
Surgeon's Notes on Performance, is a
representative example of his usual writing talent,
I will completely agree with the above assessment.
This collection of original and previously
published essays is highly readable and very
interesting. Normally, I am not all that interested
in reading about medical topics unless it impacts
me personally. I'm not a great fan of hospitals nor
am I enthusiastic about going to a physician.
Fortunately, for most of my life I have enjoyed
relatively excellent health. My attitude, however,
changed five years ago and Gawande's book takes on
some genuine relevance for me. How so and why?
In a section of his book, entitled "The Mop-Up,"
Gawande discusses polio and the campaign to wipe it
out in Asia wherein he was a momentary observer in
the field in 2003. Way back in ancient history,
when I was a mere child in the 1940s and America
was hit with a polio epidemic, I was diagnosed with
polio and almost died. Hence the relevance here for
me. But more than that, I am convinced to this day
that I was "saved" because of the efforts of a
nurse -- I'm sure she was one of Gawande's
"positive deviants" which he describes in his book
-- who insisted on treating me and others with a
controversial treatment (opposed by most of the
medical "establishment" at the time) called "The
Sister Kenny Method." She never lost a patient, by
the way; we all recovered without any significant
aftereffects that I know of.
Fortunately, from that time in the 1940s I never
needed to be hospitalized again. That is, until
2002. Then I had a heart attack and was forced into
a hospital for an angioplasty and had to take note
of medical matters, including the state of medical
care in this country." So, whereas before that
latter year I could ignore books of the type that
Gawande writes, I now have a profound interest in
all things medical. Even more so since my second
heart attack and angioplasty in 2006. (I even
subscribe to daily updates via e-mail about medical
topics!) I am now very concerned about "better"
when it comes to medical care and policy.
Gawande divides his book into three significant
sections: Diligence, Doing Right, and Ingenuity. He
says that "Diligence" is "the necessity of giving
sufficient attention to detail to avoid error and
prevail against obstacles." The section "Doing
Right" considers topics such as "how much doctors
should be paid, and what we owe patients when we
make mistakes." Important as these sections are,
the final section, "Ingenuity," is of even greater
importance in my opinion. Ingenuity, he says,
"demands more than anything a willingness to
recognize failure" and "arises from deliberate,
even obsessive, reflection on failure and a
constant searching for new solutions." Amen to
that!
Furthermore, Gawande quite realistically
concludes: "Betterment is a perpetual labor. The
world is chaotic, disorganized, and vexing, and
medicine is nowhere spared that reality. To
complicate matters, we in medicine are also only
human ourselves. ...Yet...to live as a doctor is to
live so that one's life is bound up in others' and
in science and in the messy, complicated connection
between the two. It is to live a life of
responsibility. The question...is not whether one
accepts the responsibility. Just by doing this work
one has. The question is, having accepted the
responsibility, how one does such work well." Well
said, that. Couldn't agree more.
One of the more politically relevant issues (at
least for me) that Gawande discusses is the matter
of medical practitioners' involvement in
executions. In his essay, "The Doctors of the Death
Chamber," he says that "We [doctors and
nurses] must do our best to choose
intelligently and wisely," and then notes that
"Sometimes, however, we will be wrong -- as I think
the doctors and nurses are who have used their
privileged skills to make possible 876 deaths by
lethal injection thus far." I cannot understand how
a physician -- "First, do no harm" -- could even
contemplate participating in the killing of another
human being, even if officially sanctioned. Gawande
addresses this issue in what I think is a sensible
manner. But the debate on this issue is current,
lively and will continue for some time.
I do, however, wish that Gawande had spent more
time discussing the future of health care in
America as regards the delivery of medical services
to all its citizens. He briefly touches on this
matter, but not in detail. From my perspective,
HMOs are definitely not the solution (they are part
of the current problem!) and government-managed
health care (socialized medicine) is even less
desirable. I mean, the government, in my opinion,
cannot even provide a decent public education for
our children; how can we expect it to provide
decent health care? I have considered a number of
proposals, all of them wanting in some way or
other. I'd like to see Gawande tackle this problem
in a detailed way from a physician's perspective.
Maybe another book?
Moreover, regarding the above, it is disturbing
to read what one American medical reviewer recently
stated: "We spend 50 percent more per capita on
health care than any other country, for a total of
$2 trillion a year, yet our health system,
according to the World Health Organization, ranks
37th worldwide. ...By any measure -- longevity,
infant mortality, burden of disease -- we sit in
the basement of the industrialized world." For a
country that can spend trillions of dollars to wage
war and promote "regime changes" throughout the
world, that statement is embarrassing and hard to
fathom.
All in all, Better is a good read and
extremely informative. It is full of interesting
anecdotes, as well as confronting, if only briefly,
some of the major issues in the practice of
medicine today such as the influence of money in
the healthcare system, the problem of malpractice
lawsuits, and medical practice under the tensions
of the military battlefield, as well as more
mundane issues which are often ignored such as the
simple act of hand washing or how nakedness impacts
the examination room. Since I have had my own
experiences lately with the medical establishment,
I can now relate to at least some of the topics
that Gawande discusses. Therefore -- and since
there is no medical experience like a really
personal one -- I highly recommend this book to all
readers. I guarantee you'll learn a lot, you'll
enjoy the fine writing, and you'll have some
thinking to do about the state of medical care in
America.
Read an Excerpt
from this Book
Order at Amazon.com
Better:
A Surgeon's Notes on Performance, by Atul
Gawande
Order at Powell's Books
Better:
A Surgeon's Notes on Performance, by Atul
Gawande
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