Listen to Patient Care - Death and Life in the Emergency Room (Unabridged) on Spotify. Paul Seward MD · Album · · songs. Reviews. New Reviews Check out our recent audiobook reviews.; Search Reviews Find a pick by author, narrator or title.; Earphones Awards Search our favorite listens with these award winners.; Podcast Check out our Behind the Mic podcast.; Curated Lists Editors' Picks on special topics.; Narrators. Golden Voices Explore listen to the "Best of the Best" narrators. · Seward rejects doctor-as-God narratives to write frankly about moments of failure, and champions the role of his colleagues in health care. And for all the moral dilemmas here, there is plenty of wit and humor, too (for example, the patient who punched the author).
* = Asterisk indicates acronym. radio frequency, ambulance to hosp. 3TC: Lamivudine (Epivir) (1 part of triple therapy for HIV) 5-HT: 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin). Colorado hospitals, primarily those in the Front Range, had to divert patients away from their emergency rooms more frequently in October than they did in the first eight months of combined. Listen to Patient Care - Death and Life in the Emergency Room, Chapter 1 on Spotify. Paul Seward MD · Song ·
Listen to Patient Care by Paul Seward, MD with a free trial. Listen to bestselling audiobooks on the web, iPad, iPhone and Android. Recalling remarkable cases—and people—from a career launched in the first days of Emergency Medicine, Dr. Paul Seward leads us in his memoir through suspenseful diagnoses and explorations of anatomy. Drawing on a career launched in the first days of the specialty of emergency medicine, Dr. Paul Seward takes the reader with him into the ER in his riveting memoir. Told in fast-paced, stand-alone chapters that recall unforgettable medical cases, Patient Care offers the fascination of medical mysteries, wrapped in the drama of living and dying. A snap judgment about a child nearly kills him, and a priest who may be having a heart attack refuses treatment. More like death and some life in the emergency room. I thought it was interesting that the author freely admits to not remembering all the details of some of his experiences. Most of the stories end with his patients dying but Seward tells them in such a way that most of the stories are not sad just a matter of fact.
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