Dr. Chen

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Dr.Chen is a specialist who does both liver transplants and liver disease surgery. Most as of late on personnel of UCLA division of surgery, she talks broadly and composes a segment for The New York Times. Her book, as the title suggests is a self-portraying impression of her encounters with respect to death; starting in medicinal school and traveling through different preparing periods. We in palliative care, obviously, manage passing much of the time, along these lines perusing this book you will without a doubt discover things that impact you and in addition things that baffle you. Her written work style is extremely captivating in its credibility and story frame. I read about patients that could without much of a stretch have been individuals …show more content…

And surgeons, whose work is immediate and very public, might have the biggest problem of all. If there's tangible reward in an operation well done and successful, there is a palpable sense of failure -- toward the patient, colleagues, and oneself -- when an operation falls short of its aim. Death, the worst possible result of our attempts to heal, makes us turn away in shame, in sadness, and -- as Dr. Pauline Chen explains it -- in fear of our own mortality. Dr. Chen transplants livers, thereby having chosen a career into which death finds its way on a regular basis. And, as is clear from her deeply personal and introspective writing, she has struggled to face it. Final Exam: A Surgeon's Reflections on Mortality is a deeply felt plea to all of us to turn away from turning away; to recognize that even when we've failed them, our patients need us, and that in staying with them to the end, resolution is a two-way street. The realization did not come easily, and Dr. Chen shares her journey to understanding candidly, self-critically, and movingly. Evocatively written, intertwined with affecting and beautifully rendered stories of the people -- family and patients alike -- whose lives and deaths formed who she is, Dr. Chen's book takes us on her journey as if we were holding

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