購入オプション
紙の本の価格: | ¥1,631 |
割引: | ¥ 174 (11%) |
|
|
Kindle 価格: |
¥1,457
(税込) |
獲得ポイント:
|
15ポイント
(1%)
|


![[Rana Awdish]のIn Shock: How Nearly Dying Made Me a Better Intensive Care Doctor (English Edition)](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/413laoSKICL._SY346_.jpg)
In Shock: How Nearly Dying Made Me a Better Intensive Care Doctor (English Edition) Kindle版
Rana Awdish
(著)
著者の作品一覧、著者略歴や口コミなどをご覧いただけます
この著者の 検索結果 を表示
あなたは著者ですか?
著者セントラルはこちら
|
その他 の形式およびエディションを表示する
他の形式およびエディションを非表示にする
価格
|
新品 | 中古品 |
Kindle版 (電子書籍)
"もう一度試してください。"
|
¥1,457 | — |
Kindle版 (電子書籍), 2018/1/25 |
¥1,457
|
— | — |
Audible版, 完全版
"もう一度試してください。"
|
¥0
|
Audible会員 - 無料体験 |
MP3 CD, オーディオブック, MP3オーディオ, SACD
"もう一度試してください。"
|
¥4,387 | — |
この商品を買った人はこんな商品も買っています
ページ: 1 / 1 最初に戻るページ: 1 / 1
- Critical: Stories from the front line of intensive care medicine (English Edition)Kindle版
- Unnatural Causes: 'An absolutely brilliant book. I really recommend it, I don't often say that' Jeremy Vine, BBC Radio 2 (English Edition)Kindle版
- Breaking & Mending: A junior doctor’s stories of compassion & burnout (Wellcome Collection) (English Edition)Kindle版
- Trust Me, I'm a (Junior) Doctor (English Edition)Kindle版
- Letters from the Pit: Stories of a Physician's Odyssey in Emergency Medicine (English Edition)Kindle版
- Where Does it Hurt?: What the Junior Doctor did next (English Edition)Kindle版
商品の説明
レビュー
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. (James McConnachie The Sunday Times)
Tense, powerful and gripping... her writing style is often nothing short of beautiful - evocative and emotional. (Adam Kay 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. (Dr Alexander Van Tulleken 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. (Caroline Sanderson 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. (Sarah Ditum Mail on Sunday) --このテキストは、paperback版に関連付けられています。
Tense, powerful and gripping... her writing style is often nothing short of beautiful - evocative and emotional. (Adam Kay 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. (Dr Alexander Van Tulleken 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. (Caroline Sanderson 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. (Sarah Ditum Mail on Sunday) --このテキストは、paperback版に関連付けられています。
著者について
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.
--このテキストは、paperback版に関連付けられています。
登録情報
- ASIN : B072NZLD6S
- 出版社 : Transworld Digital (2018/1/25)
- 発売日 : 2018/1/25
- 言語 : 英語
- ファイルサイズ : 725 KB
- Text-to-Speech(テキスト読み上げ機能) : 有効
- X-Ray : 有効にされていません
- Word Wise : 有効
- 本の長さ : 266ページ
-
Amazon 売れ筋ランキング:
- 414,438位洋書 (の売れ筋ランキングを見る洋書)
- - 49位Nursing Issues, Trends & Roles
- - 115位Doctor-Patient Relations
- - 200位Nursing (Kindleストア)
- カスタマーレビュー:
カスタマーレビュー
5つ星のうち4.7
星5つ中の4.7
641 件のグローバル評価
評価はどのように計算されますか?
全体的な星の評価と星ごとの割合の内訳を計算するために、単純な平均は使用されません。その代わり、レビューの日時がどれだけ新しいかや、レビューアーがAmazonで商品を購入したかどうかなどが考慮されます。また、レビューを分析して信頼性が検証されます。
他の国からのトップレビュー

Sue Scott
5つ星のうち5.0
An insightful and sympathis book about doctors and patients
2018年4月20日に英国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
This book was amazing. Dr Awdish writes with clarity and great emotion and holds nothing back about the dreadful things which happened to her whilst in hospital. Many people will be able to identify with her as she goes through crisis afer crisis and nearly loses her life. Her realisation about how patients feel in extreme situations comes as a complete revelation to her and it is obvious that she is both horrified and scared to death. It is very comforting to know that at least one doctor, albeit in the USA, at last understands how we patients feel in extremis. However, she has the benefit of being an ITU consultant and can see as she goes through her treatment, what and how things are happening to her and is torn between talking to her colleagues both as doctor and patient, something the ordinary patient cannot do. We often do not understand what is being done and why and we are often not told, for whatever reason. I am very concerned with doctor/patient relations and am very concerned that little training is given. But the other, more unexpected, revelation in this book, is the way doctors and trained and treated by their superiors. I hadn't realised that the medical profession regard itself often as failures, having to deal with guilt and shame on a daily basis. Some even kill themselves because of the way they are made to feel, not just by grieving patients, but by their own colleagues. Nothwithstanding the Hypocratic oath which states "Do no harm" - when we consult our doctors, the harm is already done and the medical profession try to make it better, not always successfully. But they do their best even if they fail, and we need to understand this. Furthermore, sometimes it is a better outcome to die than to live and the relentless way in which some doctors are encouraged and even bullied into preserving life at all costs, is horrendous for all concerned. I would encourage everyone to read this book as it shines a clear light on the medical profession. Dr Awdish has shown amazing insight into one of the most important situations in our lives and this clearly written, empathic and brilliant book helps us to better understanding. One of the most amazing and important books I have ever read.
3人のお客様がこれが役に立ったと考えています
違反を報告
レビュー を日本語に翻訳する

Leitir
5つ星のうち5.0
A book that creates a sacred space for sparks to gather and hope to rise
2018年8月13日に英国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
On one level this book is an emotional rollercoaster of a story about a remarkable woman, her near-death or actual-death experience, and her humbling account of her recovery from that as well as her courageous story of how she is seeking to reshape the cultural formation of medical professionals as a result. Indeed, this is how I first encountered the author’s writing - an article she published a few years ago where she alluded to her experience as a patient and how it formed and stiffened her resolve to make that new difference. If the book had confined itself to this mission, it would truly deserve all the accolades it has received. But this book is something much greater, much deeper, more whole, than any of these things. And yet it is wonderfully incomplete - the book is in some ways a clarion call to all of us who work in a professional space with the public to really think about how we talk to and relate with patients or learners. It ends with a clear indication that we have a lot to do. Like the subtle but clearly audible ringing of a small but beautifully ornate bell, the word “sacred” occurs a number of times through the book, particularly towards the end. Not in any overtly or overbearing religious way. Rather, it does so in a way that echoes the writing of Sarah Blondin who talks about the importance of making what you do sacred. Or like the first of the four agreements - Be impeccable with your word. The idea of authentic communication and how it can help both the professional and those they are working with. Or like the sense of where Andy Hargreaves talks about the idea of spiritual leadership - a sense of spirituality that is rooted in sense of self and sense of place - two soul-rooted cavernous depths from which so much light can come. Interestingly, at one point Rana says that this story is about the darkness - and when you read the book you will have some sense of the profound beauty of that statement. It has echoes of John O’Donohue who pointed out that all life begins in darkness. This book has created a new sacred space in my heart - a new room in the home of my heart - and Rana seems to call on us to gather the sparks of light to fill this space of hope. It is an incredibly inspirational, uplifting and humbling book that is rooted in the sorrow and beauty of real lives - this multi-layered paradox should give some sense of the rich depths which this book helps you to explore.

Janet Rodgers
5つ星のうち5.0
Despite being book seeming to relate only to medicine, its not. Very informative for all!
2019年12月6日に英国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
I couldn't have read this at better time, just wish I had read the last 20% before my appointment with Cardiologist, no scrap that, I don't know where he was, it was Registrar who sadly did not ask questions I expected as I had researched the condition I was told I had, with nothing other than blood pressure, ECG, I was passed to have 2 minor ops done. Before that, I will pay for a second opinion, my brain and heart are anything but happy with the Consultation, or the fact, the Registrar couldn't finish his sentence about why he was not seeing me. Annoyed, recent family history of Genetic Heart defect just been discovered. Without MRI, needed in this case, gaily informed ops could go ahead.
Consultation could be termed short. I will pay for second opinion despite having few funds as I have 4 sons who will need to know do I have the gene, if so they have 50% chance of inheriting.
As with other issues, where it turned out eventually, suffering a lot, I have been right.
Problem, definitely are not listening. I hadn't the confidence to ask as I didn't feel questions were welcome.
I needed to use her list.
Yes I have Lupus, etc. I know my problems are not all down to that, feel dismissed when, yes, but you have Lupus is always brought up, giving an out.
Screenshots will be taken, I will do as she suggests. I will also try not to be afraid to call them out on a diagnosis given without adequate tests and information gathering.
Undoubtedly opened my eyes.
Excellent reading too.
Thank you.
Consultation could be termed short. I will pay for second opinion despite having few funds as I have 4 sons who will need to know do I have the gene, if so they have 50% chance of inheriting.
As with other issues, where it turned out eventually, suffering a lot, I have been right.
Problem, definitely are not listening. I hadn't the confidence to ask as I didn't feel questions were welcome.
I needed to use her list.
Yes I have Lupus, etc. I know my problems are not all down to that, feel dismissed when, yes, but you have Lupus is always brought up, giving an out.
Screenshots will be taken, I will do as she suggests. I will also try not to be afraid to call them out on a diagnosis given without adequate tests and information gathering.
Undoubtedly opened my eyes.
Excellent reading too.
Thank you.

mrs kathleen mckirkle
5つ星のうち4.0
Interesting but more fof the medical fraternity
2018年3月26日に英国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
It's not a book for entertainment or for passing time more an informative and personal viewpoint of how it feels to be critically ill from a professional medics viewpoint. I found myself skipping some paragraphs because I didn't understand the narrative. I did gain the insight of how the medical practitioners perceive their patients although I had actually guessed this already having like e most people been a patient at some point in my life. It is not light reading but I feel the medical profession could gain much from reading this book. I hope the do then the public will benefit.

GeordieReader
5つ星のうち5.0
An important book by someone uniquely qualified to understand the issues
2018年8月9日に英国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
When she was seven months pregnant with her first child, Rana Awdish suffered devastating internal bleeding. She lost the baby and very nearly her life, ‘dying’ twice, once in the operating theatre and once in the intensive care unit where she worked. In some ways, this is a biography detailing the long road to recovery and the desire, against all the odds, to have another child. It’s also an impassioned plea for empathy in medicine, mainly, of course for the patients’ wellbeing, but also for the benefit of health care professionals, who can suffer stress when emotions are denied.
現時点ではこのメニューの読み込みに問題があります。