From Our Shelves: The People's Hospital
Angel Rivera
Welcome to another edition of "From Our Shelves" where I highlight and briefly review a book from our collection that I have read. Today I present The People's Hospital: Hope and Peril in American Medicine. The hospital is Ben Taub Hospital, in Houston, Texas, and the author is one of their doctors. Ben Taub is the local trauma center. It is also the hospital of last resort, the indigent's hospital. If you are too poor and/or uninsured, and you have nowhere else to go, Ben Taub will take you in. The author provides stories of patients and a look at how the hospital works. We also get some history of hospitals in the United States and health care policy in the United States. The author provides some good information and demystifies a lot of the American health care industry. It is not an easy book to read, but it is well worth reading.
See details below including publisher information and location in the library.
The People's Hospital by Ricardo Nuila
Call Number: Stacks 362.11 N968p 2023
ISBN: 9781501198045
Publication Date: 2023-03-14
This "compelling mixture of health care policy and gripping stories from the frontlines of medicine" (The Guardian) explores the question: where does an uninsured person go when turned away by hospitals, clinics, and doctors? Here, we follow the lives of five uninsured Houstonians as their struggle for survival leads them to a hospital that prioritizes people over profit. First, we meet Stephen, the restaurant franchise manager who signed up for his company's lowest priced plan, only to find himself facing insurmountable costs after a cancer diagnosis. Then Christian--a young college student and retail worker who can't seem to get an accurate diagnosis, let alone treatment, for his debilitating knee pain. Geronimo, thirty-six years old, has liver failure, but his meager disability check disqualifies him for Medicaid--and puts a life-saving transplant just out of reach. Roxana, who's lived in the community without a visa for more than two decades, suffers from complications related to her cancer treatment. And finally, there's Ebonie, a young mother whose high-risk pregnancy endangers her life. Whether due to immigration status, income, or the vagaries of state Medicaid law, all five are denied access to care. For all five, this exclusion could prove life-threatening. Each patient eventually lands at Ben Taub, the county hospital where Dr. Nuila has worked for over a decade. Nuila delves with empathy into the experiences of his patients, braiding their dramas into a singular narrative that contradicts the established idea that the only way to receive good health care is with good insurance. As readers follow the moving twists and turns in each patient's story, it's impossible to deny that our system is broken--and that Ben Taub's innovative model, where patient care is more important than insurance payments, could help light the path forward.
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