"We Can't Kill Your Mother!"

And Other Stories of Intensive Care

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, Inspiration & Meditation, Inspirational, Health & Well Being, Health
Cover of the book "We Can't Kill Your Mother!" by Lawrence Martin, AuthorHouse
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Lawrence Martin ISBN: 9781456799496
Publisher: AuthorHouse Publication: September 30, 2011
Imprint: AuthorHouse Language: English
Author: Lawrence Martin
ISBN: 9781456799496
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Publication: September 30, 2011
Imprint: AuthorHouse
Language: English

In the early 1980s I wrote a story about an extremely ill patient cared for in our medical intensive care unit (MICU) at Mt. Sinai Hospital, Cleveland. Called A Case For Intensive Care, the story was for a general audience and appeared in a local college literary magazine. Until then all my published writing had been for doctors only, and I wanted to explain a complicated medical case in a way that anyone could understand. In the ensuing years I wrote many other patient-centered stories, each intended for a general audience. They are now collected in We Cant Kill Your Mother! and Other Stories of Intensive Care. This book is for the general reader - In fact the only requirement is an interest in humanity. Illness and medicine are universal and everyone has some familiarity with hospitals, if only from the position of consumer. Most people have, at some point, either been hospitalized or visited a family member in the hospital. These stories take you inside the medical intensive care unit, a major part of every acute care hospital. Thats the setting, but the subject is people and their serious (and sometimes strange) afflictions. The first chapter gives an overview of intensive care rounds and how the MICU operates. Succeeding chapters are devoted to one or two patients and the challenges they present. Like Harold Switek, too ill to leave MICU, too psychotic to stay. And Willie the Yellow Man, whose love affair with alcohol exceeded anything youve ever seen. Youll meet a young socialite hospitalized with rapid onset of total paralysis and wonder as we did will she ever hug her kids again? And another woman about to have her baby during a terrifying asthma attack. I am not the first, and will certainly not be the last, medical professional to write about his or her patients. In a literary sense doctors and nurses are privileged; what we see in our daily jobs is more than enough to fill many interesting books. Lawrence Martin, M.D. Cleveland, Ohio

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In the early 1980s I wrote a story about an extremely ill patient cared for in our medical intensive care unit (MICU) at Mt. Sinai Hospital, Cleveland. Called A Case For Intensive Care, the story was for a general audience and appeared in a local college literary magazine. Until then all my published writing had been for doctors only, and I wanted to explain a complicated medical case in a way that anyone could understand. In the ensuing years I wrote many other patient-centered stories, each intended for a general audience. They are now collected in We Cant Kill Your Mother! and Other Stories of Intensive Care. This book is for the general reader - In fact the only requirement is an interest in humanity. Illness and medicine are universal and everyone has some familiarity with hospitals, if only from the position of consumer. Most people have, at some point, either been hospitalized or visited a family member in the hospital. These stories take you inside the medical intensive care unit, a major part of every acute care hospital. Thats the setting, but the subject is people and their serious (and sometimes strange) afflictions. The first chapter gives an overview of intensive care rounds and how the MICU operates. Succeeding chapters are devoted to one or two patients and the challenges they present. Like Harold Switek, too ill to leave MICU, too psychotic to stay. And Willie the Yellow Man, whose love affair with alcohol exceeded anything youve ever seen. Youll meet a young socialite hospitalized with rapid onset of total paralysis and wonder as we did will she ever hug her kids again? And another woman about to have her baby during a terrifying asthma attack. I am not the first, and will certainly not be the last, medical professional to write about his or her patients. In a literary sense doctors and nurses are privileged; what we see in our daily jobs is more than enough to fill many interesting books. Lawrence Martin, M.D. Cleveland, Ohio

More books from AuthorHouse

Cover of the book Praying for Christmas by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book Friends but a Possession by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book Cocaine, the Gulf Connection by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book Voices of Gethsemane by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book The Shepherd by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book Iii Wishes by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book Make Love to My Page by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book Cotton and Clyde and the Chameleons by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book A Search for a Theology of Resuscitation by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book It's Simply Life by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book Alien Deception by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book You May Die Earlier Without Knowing This? by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book Two Men with a Mission by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book Driving to the Darkness by Lawrence Martin
Cover of the book The Green Cowboy by Lawrence Martin
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy