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101. Saving the Heart: The Battle to Conquer Coronary Disease by Stephen Klaidman | |
Hardcover: 272
Pages
(2000-01-15)
list price: US$27.50 -- used & new: US$9.41 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: B000H2M7C0 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Klaidman shows how clinicians, engineers, and entrepreneurs have devised radically new ways to treat a diseased heart. He examines the startling extent to which financial ambition has shaped the dynamics of cardiology--now a multi-billion dollar medical/academic/industrial/governmental hybrid--and the inevitable conflicts of interest such ambition creates. Can a patient's needs come first when market share and profits skew the focus away from medical prudence? Can clinical trials be both free of bias and fast enough to keep up with the flood of new drugs and high-tech devices? Klaidman tackles these questions using real cases, often in the context of wrenching bedside decisions. Immensely readable and packed with vivid detail, Saving the Heart explores the past, present and swiftly developing future of a high-stakes medical specialty. And it weaves into the fast moving narrative advice on how to make the right treatment choices and identify the best cardiologists and surgeons. If you are one of the 14 million Americans who suffers from coronary disease, Saving the Heart could save your life. Customer Reviews (2)
Good read, but...
HEARTily recommended Allmajor surgical developments, most of which occurred in the twentiethcentury, are explained in detail. The struggles of medical pioneers to gainacceptance of what at the time were radical innovations are amply explored.Among these innovations are angiography (imaging technology), heart-lungmachine, coronary bypass surgery (with and without the heart-lung machine),angioplasty, and minimally invasive bypass surgery. Hi-tech heartsurgery-an extremely complex and difficult subject-is explained for thelayman to understand. The benefits and problems of each of the currentprocedures are explained. Klaidman explores hi-tech surgical instruments,a highly profitable multi-billion dollar business. His biographicalprofiles of some developers (doctor-engineer-inventors) and entrepreneursdisclose how the competitive race of developers to market first and therivalry of entrepreneurs for market share may be detrimental to the bestinterests of patients. None of the many present sophisticated treatmentsprovide a cure!They just alleviate symptoms. The pioneers of today aresearching for cures. Their approaches are described and are not onlyfascinating but also innovative. The final chapter discusses the ethicalquestions raised by our current medical system:conflicts of interestbetween practitioners with financial stakes in various treatments;competition between advocates of various treatment options; competitionbetween various surgical equipment manufacturers for market share; thepressure to reduce costs by HMOs; etc. If there is one fault to the book,it is that the title "Saving the Heart: The Battle to Conquer CoronaryDisease" led me to believe that it would be more comprehensive. Thedrugs-nitroglycerin, Coumadin, beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers,statins--were mentioned only as they pertained to a topic then beingexplored, not in the detail the surgical treatments were given. Not evenmentioned are life style changes--diet, exercise and meditation--that DeanOrnish has proposed.A book on these topics written as well as this onewould definitely be welcomed. But for what this book does it does it sowell a five star rating is most appropriate. ... Read more |
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