|Listed in category:
Have one to sell?

When Doctors Don't Listen: How to Avoid Misdiagnoses and Unnecessary Tests

US $7.15
ApproximatelyAU $10.96
Condition:
Acceptable
Giving never felt so good. This sale benefits charity.
Postage:
Free Standard Shipping.
Located in: Columbus, Ohio, United States
Delivery:
Estimated between Thu, 14 Aug and Mon, 18 Aug to 94104
Delivery time is estimated using our proprietary method which is based on the buyer's proximity to the item location, the postage service selected, the seller's postage history, and other factors. Delivery times may vary, especially during peak periods.
Returns:
No returns accepted.
Payments:
     Diners Club

Shop with confidence

eBay Money Back Guarantee
Get the item you ordered or your money back. Learn moreeBay Money Back Guarantee - opens new window or tab
Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing.
eBay item number:256150160964
Last updated on 02 Aug, 2024 02:34:18 AESTView all revisionsView all revisions

All net proceeds will support Goodwill Columbus

Since 1939, we've been building independence, improving quality of life and providing work opportunities for individuals with disabilities and other barriers. At Goodwill Columbus, we're proud to be ...
  • Official eBay for Charity listing. Learn more
  • This sale benefits a verified non-profit partner.

Item specifics

Condition
Acceptable: A book with obvious wear. May have some damage to the cover but integrity still intact. ...
ISBN
9780312594916

About this product

Product Identifiers

Publisher
St. Martin's Press
ISBN-10
0312594917
ISBN-13
9780312594916
eBay Product ID (ePID)
117287096

Product Key Features

Number of Pages
352 Pages
Publication Name
When Doctors Don't Listen : How to Avoid Misdiagnoses and Unnecessary Tests
Language
English
Publication Year
2013
Subject
Physician & Patient, Health Care Issues, Reference, General, Diagnosis
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
Health & Fitness, Medical
Author
Leana Wen, Joshua Kosowsky
Format
Hardcover

Dimensions

Item Height
1.2 in
Item Weight
18.9 Oz
Item Length
9.5 in
Item Width
6.4 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
Reviews
Wen and Kosowsky's work is significant... Who should read When Doctors Don't Listen ? Wishfully, doctors...certainly psychologists, and social workers...mental health providers... [and] anyone who is now or anticipates following family members of loved ones through illness and anyone who is concerned about his or her own medical care., A powerful appeal for individualized medical evaluation based on an active partnership between doctors and patients. The rational, mutual approach to diagnosis advocated by Drs. Wen and Kosowsky is the antidote for mindless and wasteful routines that all too often replace careful listening and focused assessment of each patient., Doctors take an oath to do no harm. Yet more than ever, modern medicine makes healthy people sick. Emergency physicians Leana Wen and Josh Kosowski make a passionate argument for patients to get involved and informed about their care. A fast, smart read to help you take charge of your health., It's critical for patients to advocate for their own health. This book teaches you how...Read it; it will change radically how you approach your doctors., Doctors Wen and Kosowsky (Pocket Emergency Medicine, co-editor) nudge the medical "consumer empowerment movement" forward with this provocative dialogic guide to help patients get the right diagnosis and treatment while avoiding the pitfalls of formulaic "cookbook" medicine. It all starts with an open conversation, the pair assert--much like the banter between car owner and mechanic on NPR's popular Car Talk program--and ends with an active M.D.-patient partnership. "You are the key to your own health, and you have to help your doctor help you," the duo insist. Recounted are hair-raising stories of patients who bore the brunt of doctors leaping to "worst-case reasoning" instead of listening to what their patients were telling them, like Jerry the car mechanic with a pulled muscle who was treated for a heart attack. The team warns consumers that the transformation from passive recipient of medical care to active partner won't be easy, but provide plenty of how-tos in their "8 Pillars" toward building a patient-doctor partnership. Theirs is an urgent call to action for patients, and a stark heads-up for doctors and the troubled healthcare industry they serve., When Doctors Don't Listen by Drs.Wen and Kosowsky have insightfully crafted a revelation about the workings of modern medicine. It addresses with a finely nuanced balance the basis for our dysfunctional "cookbook style" of medicine. The analysis is not a critical pontification by outsiders, but a pained view by deeply informed insiders. The book pleads powerfully for the disenfranchised patient. It must be read both because most of us sooner or later are bound to seek health care and because the authors provide an important viewpoint for the intensifying nationwide health care debate., "I have always said that a hospital can kill you as sure as cure you. You must be your own best advocate. Follow the advice of Drs. Wen and Kosowsky . . . and transform from being a patient to an advocate for your own health." -Fran Drescher, actor, producer, activist, and author of Cancer Schmancer "It's critical for patients to advocate for their own health.  This book teaches you how . . . Read it; it will change radically how you approach your doctors." -Melissa Etheridge, Academy Award- and Grammy Award-winning musician, Leana Wen and Josh Kosowsky have written an authoritative guide to answer a seemingly simple question: How should you talk to your doctor? Through fascinating examples taken from their own clinical experiences, they show how doctors' training fails to teach real listening skills. But Drs. Wen and Kosowsky don't stop there: They also offer up constructive and practical advice that just might save your life., Exposes the stereotypic physician following cookbook recipes to liberating a new frontier in the 'art' of humanistic medicine that empowers patients and physicians alike., I have always said that a hospital can kill you as sure as cure you. You must be your own best advocate. Follow the advice of Drs. Wen and Kosowsky...and transform from being a patient to an advocate for your own health., The book's insights and cautionary tales should appeal to medical and lay readers alike: they combine into a superb analysis of how doctors listen and think, and offer detailed suggestions for how they could do both better., A comprehensive guide to improving doctor-patient relations through empowering patients to take an active role in their care. . .As health care becomes more complex and political, this book provides clear direction toward better care., This book is a must read for informing the dialogue about health care reform and transforming medical education. Its humanistic authors provide support for re-integrating the lost art of humanism with more scientific medicine. The authors' passion for the individual behind the illness is contagious., This clearly-written, brilliantly and creatively thought-out book, filled with fascinating and horrifying examples of how doctors are now trained to not listen to their patients in order to 'rule out' diseases, focuses on 'ruling in' diagnoses that not only are accurate, but that will save billions of dollars per year in lawsuit-driven tests. A brave, terrific, essential work., Leana Wen and Joshua Kosowsky, emergency physicians at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston and Harvard University, urge patients to assert their voice. They warn that 'a health care crisis is not the time to keep your mouth shut,' but rather a critical time to speak up and be your own advocate., This is a well-written book on an innovative approach to healthcare reform: it challenges patients to take charge of their health and every medical encounter with their doctor. An important topic and an important book--I encourage my patients to read it., Their proposal for 'diagnostic partnership' is a major contribution of this courageous book in which common sense plays the leading role., "Doctors Wen and Kosowsky (Pocket Emergency Medicine, co-editor) nudge the medical "consumer empowerment movement" forward with this provocative dialogic guide to help patients get the right diagnosis and treatment while avoiding the pitfalls of formulaic "cookbook" medicine. It all starts with an open conversation, the pair assert--much like the banter between car owner and mechanic on NPR's popular Car Talk program--and ends with an active M.D.-patient partnership. "You are the key to your own health, and you have to help your doctor help you," the duo insist. Recounted are hair-raising stories of patients who bore the brunt of doctors leaping to "worst-case reasoning" instead of listening to what their patients were telling them, like Jerry the car mechanic with a pulled muscle who was treated for a heart attack. The team warns consumers that the transformation from passive recipient of medical care to active partner won't be easy, but provide plenty of how-tos in their "8 Pillars" toward building a patient-doctor partnership. Theirs is an urgent call to action for patients, and a stark heads-up for doctors and the troubled healthcare industry they serve.", Not only offers a compelling argument for revitalizing this touchstone of good medicine, but also provides a comprehensive guide for how doctors and patients can improve the quality of healthcare by doing so., What a brilliant concept - this outstanding book provides an innovative and interesting approach to understanding how physicians interact with patients presenting with an illness and reach a diagnosis. Using a case-based approach followed with careful analysis of the process by two experts in the field of Emergency Medicine, clarity and transparency are provided to one of the most complex areas of medicine, how the physician develops the framework for a diagnosis and orders tests to prove it. Drs. Wen and Kosowsky have given the non-medically trained reader a variety of common scenarios for presentation to the Emergency Department. Physicians often reach a wrong diagnosis by following set pathways hard-wired from years of training and experience. Unfortunately, key words or phrases from the patient which lead the physician down a "typical" pathway for an illness can trigger the wrong answer and result in a large number of expensive, time-consuming, and potentially harmful tests. By teaching the patient the importance of providing the essential information on their illness to the physician, and making sure the physician actually listens to them, the likelihood that the physician makes the correct diagnosis increases substantially. This excellent book contains a literal treasure trove of information which will be beneficial and educational for patient and physician alike. As popular as the ED has been over the last two decades, pictured in television shows such as "ER" and other medically oriented television series, I anticipate this book will be widely read, very successful, and often quoted, not only by the lay public but also the medically-trained care providers who strive to listen better to their patients., Evidenced based medicine, clinical guidelines, and diagnostic algorithms have been widely adopted as an answer to inconsistent and out-of-date medical practice. Drs. Leana Wen and Joshua Kosowsky make the case that the resultant algorithms-gone-wild syndrome seen in many medical settings today actually drives imprecise and wasteful testing, muddled diagnoses, and patient confusion. They argue that these clinical behaviors are at the heart of our "morbidly obese" medical care system and that thoughtful physicians relying on patient narratives and diagnostic common sense will create a leaner medical care system and better patient outcomes. Theirs is a contrarian and compelling case with the wellbeing of millions of patients and $250 billion a year riding on it., "Evidenced based medicine, clinical guidelines, and diagnostic algorithms have been widely adopted as an answer to inconsistent and out-of-date medical practice. Drs. Leana Wen and Joshua Kosowsky make the case that the resultant algorithms-gone-wild syndrome seen in many medical settings today actually drives imprecise and wasteful testing, muddled diagnoses, and patient confusion. They argue that these clinical behaviors are at the heart of our "morbidly obese" medical care system and that thoughtful physicians relying on patient narratives and diagnostic common sense will create a leaner medical care system and better patient outcomes. Theirs is a contrarian and compelling case with the wellbeing of millions of patients and $250 billion a year riding on it.", This is an important contribution to helping both physicians and patients more effectively manage their encounters. The authors make it clear that 'more medical care' may frequently be harmful to a patient's health.
Illustrated
Yes
Table Of Content
Introduction PART I: How We Got Here One: From Shamans to Black Boxes Two: Do As I Say; Do As I Do PART II: Cookbook Medicine-- Live from the ER Three: The Car Mechanic with the Pulled Muscle Four: The Mother of Two Who Had Trouble Breathing Five: The College Student with a Bad Headache Six: The Woman Who Fainted at the Sight of a Sandwich PART III: The Building Blocks to Avoid Misdiagnosis Seven: A Crash Course on Diagnosis Eight: Begin at the Beginning Nine: What's the Story? Ten: What Does the Story Mean? Eleven: Help Me Help You Twelve: It's Just Common Sense PART IV: How to Get to the Right Diagnosis Thirteen: The 8 Pillars to Better Diagnosis Fourteen: Prescriptions for Patients Fifteen: Cookbook Outcomes, Revisited PART V: Prescription for Reform Sixteen: Diagnosis, Multiplied Seventeen: Countering the Skeptics Conclusions Appendix 1: Prescriptions for Healthcare Providers Appendix 2: 21 Exercises Toward Better Diagnosis Appendix 3: Worksheets Toward Your Diagnosis Appendix 4: 911 Glossary of Key Terms
Synopsis
In this examination of the doctor-patient relationship, Drs. Wen and Kosowsky argue that diagnosis, once the cornerstone of medicine, is fast becoming a lost art, with grave consequences. Using real-life stories of cookbook-diagnoses-gone-bad, the doctors illustrate how active patient participation can prevent these mistakes. Wen and Kosowsky offer tangible follow-up questions patients can easily incorporate into every doctor's visit to avoid counterproductive and even potentially harmful tests. In the pursuit for the best medical care available, readers can't afford to miss out on these inside-tips and more: - How to deal with a doctor who seems too busy to listen to you - 8-Pillars to a Better Diagnosis How to tell the whole story of your illness - Learning test risks and evaluating whether they're worth it - How to get a working diagnosis at the end of every doctor's visit By empowering patients to engage with their doctors as partners in their diagnosis, When Doctors Don't Listen is an essential guide that enables patients to speak up and take back control of their health care.

Item description from the seller

About this seller

goodwillcolumbus

99.6% positive Feedback13K items sold

Joined Aug 2013
Usually responds within 24 hours

Detailed seller ratings

Average for the last 12 months
Accurate description
5.0
Reasonable postage costs
5.0
Postage speed
5.0
Communication
5.0

Seller feedback (3,490)

All ratings
Positive
Neutral
Negative
  • z***r (1287)- Feedback left by buyer.
    Past 6 months
    Verified purchase
    Great seller, exactly as pictured/described. quick shipping, well packaged. Books arrived in very, very good shape. A very good value for the price. The regional Goodwill sellers always do a great job.
  • c***t (491)- Feedback left by buyer.
    Past 6 months
    Verified purchase
    Excellent condition, quality and value. Appearance is exactly as described. Well packaged. Rapid shipping. Excellent seller. Would definitely buy from again. A++++++
  • s***e (38)- Feedback left by buyer.
    Past year
    Verified purchase
    Seller provided excellent customer service. Provided me with pictures and answered all my questions before purchasing. Shipped fast, packed nicely/safely, and item arrived as described. Highly recommend Goodwill Columbus.

Product ratings and reviews

4.5
2 product ratings
  • 1 users rated this 5 out of 5 stars
  • 1 users rated this 4 out of 5 stars
  • 0 users rated this 3 out of 5 stars
  • 0 users rated this 2 out of 5 stars
  • 0 users rated this 1 out of 5 stars

Would recommend

Good value

Compelling content

Most relevant reviews

  • Great Book

    Everyone should read this book. Very informative. With the delivery of health we have now in the USA. Doctors to really listen to paients anymore.

    Verified purchase: YesCondition: NewSold by: firstratefinds2015