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Your Medical Mind

How to Decide What Is Right for You

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An entirely new way to make the best medical decisions.
Making the right medical decisions is harder than ever. We are overwhelmed by information from all sides—whether our doctors’ recommendations, dissenting experts, confusing statistics, or testimonials on the Internet. Now Doctors Groopman and Hartzband reveal that each of us has a “medical mind,” a highly individual approach to weighing the risks and benefits of treatments.  Are you a minimalist or a maximalist, a believer or a doubter, do you look for natural healing or the latest technology?  The authors weave vivid narratives of real patients with insights from recent research to demonstrate the power of the medical mind. After reading this groundbreaking book, you will know how to arrive at choices that serve you best.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 25, 2011
      Groopman proved himself an exceptional guide to the inner workings of the doctor's mind in his bestselling How Doctors Think. Now he and Hartzband, his wife and colleague at Harvard Medical School, get inside the patient's mind. The result is a chronicle of how ordinary people, landing at a medical crossroads, must decide about care, who should provide it, and for how long. They present tales of patients who must face conflicting information or uncertain outcomes and choose a course of action: a consultant finds his usual "objectiveâ reasoning doesn't apply to the decision to undergo a bone-marrow transplant with possibly debilitating side effects; and a dying woman's change of mind about end-of-life care illustrates how unpredictable our response to death can be. The authors also illustrate the toll illness takes on a patients' loved ones as they strive to make decisions for incapacitated relatives. There are no easy answers here, no prescriptions for the "rightâ decision, but rather an illuminating look at how different people think about their options and the emotions and experiences that help shape their decisions. This remarkable survey can help make the uncertainty of illness and treatment seem just a bit more manageable and less lonely.

    • Library Journal

      April 15, 2011

      Too much information, whether from doctors, friends, drug companies, online searches, or media reports: that's the problem we face when making crucial medical decisions. The authors, who are on the staff of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Cambridge, MA, and the faculty of Harvard Medical School, here aim to give patients the tools to sort through the mess. An urgent topic; that Groopman's How Doctors Think was a New York Times best seller bodes well for this title.

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2011
      In this open-minded book, oncologist and New Yorker writer Groopman and endocrinologist Hartzband give patients license to not just blindly follow doctors' orders. The Harvard Medical School physicianswho happen to be married to each otherexplain that past experiences understandably influence consumers' decisions to take a medication or agree to a medical procedure. They cite anonymous examples but are at their best when they write about their own families. After Groopman saw his 55-year-old father die after receiving dismal care following a heart attack, he became such a big believer in modern medicine that he impatiently rushed into getting a disastrous spinal fusion for his own back pain. Such tales lead these two empathetic physicians to help patients understand what makes sense for them, given their family and medical histories and social history (their knowledge of others with similar conditions). Whether people are what these doctors call minimalists or maximalists, believers or doubters, naturalists or technology fans, they can feel good about listening to their own hearts rather than thinking a single doctor always knows what's best.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2011

      New Yorker staff writer, New York Times best-selling author, and oncologist Groopman (Harvard Medical Sch.; How Doctors Think) and endocrinologist Hartzband (Harvard Medical Sch.) present readers with a fascinating look into medical decision making. Through detailed portraits of socially and ethnically diverse real-life individuals who must make medical choices, the authors show how patients' family history, culture, profession, and attitudes toward medicine and technology can shape their decisions about treatment. The book's liberal use of stories and detailed description makes for richer insights than can be gleaned from the short, stylized cases that fill many books on medical ethics. The authors' approach also reveals how medical decision making and patient preferences can change over time. VERDICT This engaging, insightful, and illuminating book should be read by general audiences as well as medical and health-care professionals, who are often baffled by the choices their patients make.--Aaron Klink, Duke Univ., Durham, NC

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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