Description |
1 online resource (8 audio files) : digital |
Playing Time |
09:03:32 |
Description |
audio file rda |
Note |
Unabridged. |
Performer |
Narrator: Rebecca Gibel. |
Summary |
In medical charts, the term "N. A. D." (No Apparent Distress) is used for patients who appear stable. The phrase also aptly describes America's medical system when it comes to treating the underprivileged. Medical students learn on the bodies of the poor—and the poor suffer from their mistakes.Rachel Pearson confronted these harsh realities when she started medical school in Galveston, Texas. Pearson, herself from a working-class background, remains haunted by the suicide of a close friend, experiences firsthand the heartbreak of her own errors in a patient's care, and witnesses the ruinous effects of a hurricane on a Texas town's medical system. In No Apparent Distress, she chronicles her experiences and the raging disparities in a system that favors the rich and the white. This is at once an indictment of American health care and a deeply moving tale of one doctor's coming-of-age. |
System Details |
Requires OverDrive Listen (file size: N/A KB) or OverDrive app (file size: 252929 KB). |
Subject |
Medical students. -- Sound recordings.
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Medical education. -- Sound recordings.
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Health care rationing. -- Sound recordings.
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Sociobiology. -- Sound recordings.
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Genre |
Electronic audiobooks.
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Added Author |
Gibel, Rebecca.
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ISBN |
9781538414163 (sound recording) |
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