For readers of Atul Gawande and Paul Kalanithi, an intensive care doctor becomes a dying patient in her own hospital in this gripping memoir of unbearable loss, which calls for medical professionals to see patients as human beings, not just as a diagnosis.
Rana Awdish is an intensive care doctor and the director of the Pulmonary Hypertension Programme at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit. Dr Awdish's mandate is to improve the patient experience across the US health system and speak on patient advocacy at healthcare venues across the country. She was awarded the Critical Care Teaching Award in 2016 and, in 2017, the Press Ganey Physician of the Year Award and The Schwartz Center's National Compassionate Caregiver Award.
Outstanding... What marks it out is not the scale or urgency of the
trauma, although I read the first chapters at such a pace that I
almost had to remind myself to breathe. It is the writing. It
sparks and crackles with a dark energy... The writing is not just
intense, but intelligent... In Shock stands above other patient
memoirs.
*The Sunday Times*
Tense, powerful and gripping... her writing style is often nothing
short of beautiful - evocative and emotional.
*The Observer*
In Shock is both an enthralling page-turner and a haunting call to
arms for the medical profession to practice with greater kindness,
compassion and humility. Awdish captures beautifully how and why
doctors, against our best selves, can lose sight of our patients in
furious pursuit of the diagnosis, the save, the cure. Anyone –
doctor or otherwise – whose life has been touched by illness will
be transfixed by this deeply moving tale of catastrophic illness
and everything it teaches us.
*Rachel Clarke, author of Your Life in My Hands: A Junior
Doctor's Story*
Awdish looks at the way we practice medicine with a combination of
love and outrage. She writes beautifully about the secret, shameful
feelings many doctors feel they have to hide and she shows us how
we might do better. After reading this book, I feel like a
different doctor.
*Gabriel Weston, author of Direct Red: A Surgeon's Story*
A brave, powerful memoir about what it is like to be both a doctor
and a patient... There is a widsom that literally comes from
suffering.
*The Times*
There are few recent books to compare it to. Paul Kalanithi’s When
Breath Becomes Air, another physician’s account of illness, ended
with his death. Awdish lives to tell the tale, but her cascade of
medical problems is appallingly severe. Like [Adam] Kay’s, her
writing is motivated by trauma, both her own and that of her
medical colleagues…The dramatic story of her illness and recovery
alone would make the book compelling, but in the growing genre of
medical non-fiction, it is her reflections on medical practice that
really stand out.
*TLS*
Compelling and insightful, this story of what a doctor learns
through coming close to death is packed with both action and
reflection.
*Cathy Rentzenbrink, bestselling author of The Last Act of
Love*
Urgent and supremely eloquent... In Shock is a book to set
alongside the likes of Being Mortal by Atul Gawande, Direct Red by
Gabriel Weston and, of course, Paul Kalanithi's When Breath Becomes
Air.
*The Bookseller*
An extraordinary memoir.
*Daily Mail*
Awdish describes her experiences powerfully... In Shock is a
reminder that the sick are not subhuman, doctors are not
superhuman, and that medicine needs to be human in order to truly
heal.
*Mail on Sunday*
In Shock is a notable, ambitious and welcome contribution to an
emerging dialogue concerning the quality and orientation of acute
hospital care.
*Irish Times*
Awdish's book is the one I wished we were given as assigned reading
our first year of medical school, alongside our white coats and
stethoscopes ... dramatic, engaging and instructive.
*New York Times*
Harrowing and enlightening... This is a story of darkness and
light, horror and hope. It's not an easy read, but it is a
fascinating one, and highly recommended.
*The Sunday Business Post*
Had me hooked right from the start. Incredible story, and even more
incredible story-telling... has had an unexpected impact on me and
will change the way I practice medicine from here on.
*Dr Ranj Singh*
A compassionate and critical look at medicine and illness from both
a doctor’s and a patient’s perspective... Awdish has written a
unique and insightful memoir.
*Publishers Weekly*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |