The Medical Detectives Mass Market Paperback – January 1, 1982
Author: Berton Roueché | Language: English | ISBN: B001Q6K9L2 | Format: PDF, EPUB
The Medical Detectives Mass Market – January 1, 1982
You can download The Medical Detectives Mass Market Paperback – January 1, 1982 from mediafire, rapishare, and mirror link Direct download links available for The Medical Detectives Mass Market – January 1, 1982
You can download The Medical Detectives Mass Market Paperback – January 1, 1982 from mediafire, rapishare, and mirror link Direct download links available for The Medical Detectives Mass Market – January 1, 1982
- Mass Market Paperback: 403 pages
- Publisher: Pocket (1982)
- Language: English
- ASIN: B001Q6K9L2
- Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5,024,963 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
Berton Roueché wrote for the "New Yorker" magazine for almost half a century, and was winner of the 1950 Albert Lasker Medical Journalism Award. His many volumes on physicians and medical detectives, including this book, were collected from his articles in the "New Yorker."
"The Medical Detectives" volume II is great bedtime reading, because the good guys, i.e. physicians and epidemiologists always get their villain (whether it's a germ, poison gas, or a disgruntled boyfriend). Volume II's twenty-three case histories date from 1947 to 1984, before the days when Big Insurance dictated how long patients would stay in hospitals and what kind of treatment they would receive. Some of the doctors in this book actually made house calls! A couple of the cases really stayed with me, because the patients were kept in the hospital for weeks at a time just to track down a diagnosis. In one case, a man had the hiccups. In the other, a woman had a headache. Can you guess what would happen to these patients if they went to an emergency room, today?
Anyone who is interested in medical detection will be both engrossed and instructed by Roueché's careful, detailed true-life mysteries. The cases contained in this volume range from the man who hiccupped for 27 years through the deliberate poisoning of a family. One of my favorites from 1948 is called, "The Fog". This does not refer to John Carpenter's famous 1980 horror movie, but a true story that is in some ways even more frightening than anything Hollywood could produce. It takes place in Donora, Pennsylvania, a gritty mill town along the Monongahela River, which is infamous for its fogs: "They are greasy, gagging fogs, often intact even at high noon, and they sometimes last for two or three days.
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