Understanding Modern Health Care: The Wonders We Created and the Potholes We Dug

The Tin Woodsman, Dick Cheney, was given a new heart, and the scarecrow, Joe Biden, was allowed to keep his brain. (He had an aneurysm that bled).

 

But we don't live in Oz, and there is no wizard. A courageous lion named Lyndon provided socialized health care to the elderly and impoverished. Hillary tried to give it to the rest of us, and she was demonized. Barack managed to squeeze the Affordable Care Act through Congress. Eight years later, in defiance of a law that would have excluded thousands-that would have prevented many blind and lame from being healed-John McCain turned his thumb down.


We've allowed insurance companies to teach our young that med­ical care is not a shared responsibility,, and many were surprised when the youth thought it unfair when we asked them to contribute to the cost of everyone's health insurance. We taught pharmaceutical manufacturers to not worry when they spend billions and buy other companies for their drugs. We will reimburse the acquisition cost and pay what the compa­nies charge for the medications. We tell the poor of the world who can't remotely afford expensive medications and whose countries belong to the World Trade Organization-"suck it up." And we tell the wealthy to buy stock and become part of the bonanza.

 

Modern health care is 120 years old. This book is about the history of mankind's remarkable accomplishments and the forces that are shaping its future. Those who read it may not live longer, grow a thick head of hair, or avoid Alzheimer's. But an understanding of how we got to this point and the challenges we face matters.


Understanding Modern Health Care: The Wonders We Created and the Potholes We Dug

1139492865
Understanding Modern Health Care: The Wonders We Created and the Potholes We Dug

The Tin Woodsman, Dick Cheney, was given a new heart, and the scarecrow, Joe Biden, was allowed to keep his brain. (He had an aneurysm that bled).

 

But we don't live in Oz, and there is no wizard. A courageous lion named Lyndon provided socialized health care to the elderly and impoverished. Hillary tried to give it to the rest of us, and she was demonized. Barack managed to squeeze the Affordable Care Act through Congress. Eight years later, in defiance of a law that would have excluded thousands-that would have prevented many blind and lame from being healed-John McCain turned his thumb down.


We've allowed insurance companies to teach our young that med­ical care is not a shared responsibility,, and many were surprised when the youth thought it unfair when we asked them to contribute to the cost of everyone's health insurance. We taught pharmaceutical manufacturers to not worry when they spend billions and buy other companies for their drugs. We will reimburse the acquisition cost and pay what the compa­nies charge for the medications. We tell the poor of the world who can't remotely afford expensive medications and whose countries belong to the World Trade Organization-"suck it up." And we tell the wealthy to buy stock and become part of the bonanza.

 

Modern health care is 120 years old. This book is about the history of mankind's remarkable accomplishments and the forces that are shaping its future. Those who read it may not live longer, grow a thick head of hair, or avoid Alzheimer's. But an understanding of how we got to this point and the challenges we face matters.


Understanding Modern Health Care: The Wonders We Created and the Potholes We Dug

11.99 In Stock
Understanding Modern Health Care: The Wonders We Created and the Potholes We Dug

Understanding Modern Health Care: The Wonders We Created and the Potholes We Dug

by Steve Fredman
Understanding Modern Health Care: The Wonders We Created and the Potholes We Dug

Understanding Modern Health Care: The Wonders We Created and the Potholes We Dug

by Steve Fredman

eBook

$11.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

The Tin Woodsman, Dick Cheney, was given a new heart, and the scarecrow, Joe Biden, was allowed to keep his brain. (He had an aneurysm that bled).

 

But we don't live in Oz, and there is no wizard. A courageous lion named Lyndon provided socialized health care to the elderly and impoverished. Hillary tried to give it to the rest of us, and she was demonized. Barack managed to squeeze the Affordable Care Act through Congress. Eight years later, in defiance of a law that would have excluded thousands-that would have prevented many blind and lame from being healed-John McCain turned his thumb down.


We've allowed insurance companies to teach our young that med­ical care is not a shared responsibility,, and many were surprised when the youth thought it unfair when we asked them to contribute to the cost of everyone's health insurance. We taught pharmaceutical manufacturers to not worry when they spend billions and buy other companies for their drugs. We will reimburse the acquisition cost and pay what the compa­nies charge for the medications. We tell the poor of the world who can't remotely afford expensive medications and whose countries belong to the World Trade Organization-"suck it up." And we tell the wealthy to buy stock and become part of the bonanza.

 

Modern health care is 120 years old. This book is about the history of mankind's remarkable accomplishments and the forces that are shaping its future. Those who read it may not live longer, grow a thick head of hair, or avoid Alzheimer's. But an understanding of how we got to this point and the challenges we face matters.


Understanding Modern Health Care: The Wonders We Created and the Potholes We Dug


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780578913070
Publisher: Steve Fredman
Publication date: 05/17/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 318
File size: 422 KB

Table of Contents

Introduction

Chapter One: Awakening to the Microscopic World

Chapter Two: The Late-19th Century

Chapter Three: The 1900s

Chapter Four: Insulin

Chapter Five: Transfusions

Chapter Six: Viruses

Chapter Seven: Vaccines

Chapter Eight: Surgery Becomes a Learned Craft

Chapter Nine: Narcotics

Chapter Ten: Penicillin

Chapter Eleven: Hormones-Cortisone and Epinephrine

Chapter Twelve: Surgery of the Heart and Blood Vessels

Chapter Thirteen: Safety: Anesthesia-Checklists-Malpractice

Chapter Fourteen: Minimally Invasive Surgery

Chapter Fifteen: Transplantation

Chapter Sixteen: Taxpayer-Funded Research Is Privatized-Bayh-Dole

Chapter Seventeen: Medical Devices

Chapter Eighteen: Vision

Chapter Nineteen: Childbirth

Chapter Twenty: Care of Kidney Failure Becomes a Right

Chapter Twenty-One: HIV and the Plight of 23 Million Africans

Chapter Twenty-Two: The Right to Emergency Care

Chapter Twenty-Three: Hospitals

Chapter Twenty-Four: Generic Drugs

Chapter Twenty-Five: The Price of Everyday Drugs

Chapter Twenty-Six: High-Priced Drugs

Chapter Twenty-Seven: Expensive Pharmaceuticals

Chapter Twenty-Eight: Gene Therapy and CRISPR

Chapter Twenty-Nine: Gaming the System

Chapter Thirty: Are Generic Drugs Safe and Effective?

Chapter Thirty-One: The FDA-The Fox That's Guarding the Henhouse

Chapter Thirty-Two: The For-Profit Insurance Companies Take Over

Chapter Thirty-Three: Obamacare-The Affordable Care Act

A Note on Sources

Selected Bibliography

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews