
Thank you for my book. It should be mandatory reading for beginners in the field of healing to learn the human side of treatment. And we're right back to mysteries.Thank you, David Watts, for a bit of your soul.. David Watts charmingly reveals the challenges of both doctor and patient in thou
- Title : The Orange Wire Problem and Other Tales from the Doctor's Office
- Author : David Watts
- Rating : 4.75 (729 Vote)
- Publish : 2015-5-11
- Format : Hardcover
- Pages : 206 Pages
- Asin : 1587298007
- Language : English
Thank you for my book. It should be mandatory reading for beginners in the field of healing to learn the human side of treatment. And we're right back to mysteries.Thank you, David Watts, for a bit of your soul.. David Watts charmingly reveals the challenges of both doctor and patient in thought provoking essays (bio-vignettes) that you can't put down or easily forget. If you have a chance to spend some time with this book it will be time well spent.. Absolutely love this book. This task is not easy, considering the fact that the imperial collection on which the National Palace Museum is based on was, for a large part, a reflection of the personal taste of the Ch'ien-lung emperor. He truly is an example of "Do NO Harm". You can almost see Watts shrug his shoulders as he moves beyond the bureaucracy to give his patients what they need.We should all be so fortunate as to have Dr. On the other hand, the selection of paintings and ceramics (especially the Ju wares) are just superb. It's a gift to the humanity of medicine. Daniel Ost is one of my favorite designers. Sheri Brautigam'a deep knowledge of and passion for indigenous textiles comes through on every pagIn his own inimitable and unpretentious style, David Watts is also a master storyteller. He mentioned again, no biopsy. And I knew there would be no chemotherapy. Maybe it's like that Orange Wire Problem, I said. Yes exactly, he said, and four years from now when we're all sitting around the campfire we'll remember the Orange Wire Problem . And I thought to myself, my brother did that. I knew that. Spoke of the time ahead as he was dying of lung cancer. Six months from now he had said, we'll be glad we did all those drug therapies—as if to speak of the future laid claim to the future.. From Mikhail Bulgakov to William Carlos Williams to Richard Selzer to Ethan Canin, exposure to human beings at their most vulnerable has inspired fine writing. Whether the subject is the potential benefits of therapeutic deception or telling a child about death, Watts’s ear for the right word, the right tone, and the right detail never fails him.From The Orange Wire Problem and Other Tales from the Doctor’s Office:We were lingering in the outer office. Whether recounting t(Apr. Silence knows the right answer. He hadn't needed help from me at all, Watts writes of one patient. As much poet as practitioner, Watts (Bedside Manners), a San Francisco doctor, offers small, poignant stories of 26 patients and the doctor who shares their complicated past, stark present and uncertain future. Watts's patients discover it's not just the best medicine, but the best relationships that comfort them through illness. The trouble with illness is that it's only logical in the abstract, not the human, Watts notes of one woman who talks endlessly about her intractable headaches. All rights reserved. A tincture for the soul, delivered with an elegant bedside manner. All he wanted was to spend a moment with what he was up against, size it up, and then make his leap. . In this case, it's the Rx that surprises: that there are times when more gets done in silence than in speaking. 15)Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. From Publishers Weekly Welcome to a doctor's office like no other, with none


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