![]() ![]() How patients tell their stories, Groopman shows, is crucial. And the last big lesson in this book is the value placed on how the patients present themselves and their problems. It’s a subject Groopman explores with real emotion. This point is also mixed with an allied one: the role of emotions in medical work. Amid all the technologies, procedures, and processes doctors work with nowadays, that’s almost revolutionary. What they should do most of all, he advocates, is listen to patients. He focuses on what physicians actually do, and what they should do, when working with patients. This word, participate, is at the heart of what the good doctor is getting at. This book is a collection of short pieces, all of interest, based on real cases in which Dr. ![]() He does think about what he is doing, what his colleagues are doing and thinking, and what it all means. ![]() Groopman is a thinker, a reflective actor. Do doctors think, given the crazy economic pressures they operate under these days? Do other professions think? Consultants? Managers? Does anyone really think anymore - or do we all just react? The very title of Jerome Groopman’s new book, How Doctors Think, gave me pause. ![]()
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