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20+ oeuvres 865 utilisateurs 19 critiques 2 Favoris

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Perri Klass is a practicing pediatrician, an acclaimed author of fiction & nonfiction, & a prizewinning journalist. She has won five O. Henry Awards for her short stories, including three of the stories in "Love & Modern Medicine". Her fiction includes two novels, "Recombinations & Other Women's afficher plus Children", & a collection of short stories, "I Am Having an Adventure". She has also written two collections of essays about medicine, "A Not Entirely Benign Procedure: Four Years as a Medical Student" & "Baby Doctor: A Pediatrician's Training". Her columns & articles have appeared in the "New York Times Magazine", the "Washington Post", the "Boston Globe", "Discover", & "Parenting". She recently won a James Beard Foundation Award for an article in "Gourmet", "The Lunch Box as Battlefield." Both Klass's fiction & her journalism have dealt with issues of medicine & society. In her medical career she practices pediatrics at Dorchester House, a neighborhood health center in Boston, & is medical director of the national literacy program Reach Out & Read, dedicated to making books & literacy promotion part of pediatric primary care. Klass lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with Larry Wolff, a professor of history at Boston College, & their children. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins
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The life-or-death fate of children has changed dramatically over the past 200 years due to research, medicine, and public health. Abraham and Mary Todd Lincoln famously grieved the loss of their child in the White House years ago, but they were hardly alone. Rather in that era, losing a child, often due to illness or mishaps, was pretty much normal though still tragic. Today, such an experience is the exception, and we are all better for it. In this book, pediatrician Perri Klass examines the slow but steady triumph of science over common childhood ailments.

Science, especially in the twentieth century, witnessed advances over most diseases of childhood. A list of the most common causes of death in 1900 looks very different than a similar list in 2000. Tuberculosis, rheumatic fever, scarlet fever, measles, and diphtheria are presently known – or forgotten – as historical anomalies, yet they were all dreaded entities decades ago. Research advances in treatment and vaccines prevention spare us today.

Disease by disease, Klass describes the story behind each of these victories. Reading this work can open a reader’s eyes to the power of science and the power of empowering researchers. She concludes by dwelling on how societal attitudes have changed due to these breakthroughs. We are now hyperaware – and thus often overprotective – of dangers to the young. Childhood death sometimes casts shame over a family today. We can expect too much perfection instead of too little, as we did in prior eras. We also deal with massive misinformation and mistrust of medicine… despite all its triumphs.

This book is well suited to those interested in medical history. It’s also good preparation for those entering health professions to learn about these diseases through the engaging lens of history. Klass tells a good story that shouldn’t pass into the dustheaps of a forgotten past. Life is a treasure, and remembering prior successes can refine our focus towards engaging present challenges – and hopefully winning future successes. This book offers a nice narrative to dwell upon these themes.
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Signalé
scottjpearson | 2 autres critiques | Mar 23, 2024 |
The epitome of Klass' work -- a pedantic and often obnoxious narrative voice overlying the fantasies and fears that are, in fact ubiquitous among medical trainees. After reading this I knew that I wasn't the first to secretly desire running off to practice medicine in some rural third-world country -- not out of benevolence, but to be able to utilize history and physical skills, without any pesky high technology to ruin my intellectual fun and I now know that I share the mixed dread and exhilaration boarding an aircraft knowing that they may call "Is someone on board a doctor?"
Klass is maybe the most renowned medical writer and although she is far from the best, she never fails to entertain.
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Signalé
settingshadow | Aug 19, 2023 |
Great book for parents who are in the throes of trying to figure out what's going on with their "quirky kid." Lots of practical advice.
 
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CarolHicksCase | 2 autres critiques | Mar 12, 2023 |
Reading about the rampant infant mortality a hundred years ago was hard to take, but the book got happier as mortality decreased over the 20th century. A lot of things helped, and especially interesting to read about how the many vaccines were developed and put into use over the years.
 
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steve02476 | 2 autres critiques | Jan 3, 2023 |

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Œuvres
20
Aussi par
2
Membres
865
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#29,595
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½ 3.7
Critiques
19
ISBN
55
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