What I've Learned from You: The Lessons of Life Taught to a Doctor by His Patients, by Scott Kelly
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What I've Learned from You: The Lessons of Life Taught to a Doctor by His Patients, by Scott Kelly
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What I've Learned from You is the story of the lessons of life taught to a doctor by his patients. It takes us on a journey from an inner-city trauma center to the bedside of a dying cancer patient. It explores human relationships and gives an intimate view into the window of the human condition. On the road to becoming a physician, Dr. Kelly longed to find serenity in a world of conflicting ideas and aspirations. The demands of his medical training left little time for personal growth so he reached out to those around him. He took notes in a journal on the lessons of life he learned from his patients and their families. They opened their hearts and exposed their wounds. He paid attention and listened, and his patients became his teachers. Late one winter night in 2006, while leafing through old papers, he came across his journal. It inspired this book, which began as an effort to preserve the stories to share with his children. Maybe, he thought, they could learn from them too. To his surprise, as he wrote, the stories evolved and beautifully took on a life of their own. Now Dr. Kelly shares them with his readers, so we can all learn from the wisdom and experiences of these remarkable individuals. What I've Learned from You is the story of love and pain and healing and sickness and birth and dying and all of the beautiful things in between. It brings compassion and empathy back to the art of medicine.
What I've Learned from You: The Lessons of Life Taught to a Doctor by His Patients, by Scott Kelly- Amazon Sales Rank: #694580 in Books
- Published on: 2015-03-27
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 7.99" h x .43" w x 5.00" l, .46 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 204 pages
Review "A terrific book by a wonderful doctor!" --Sanjay Gupta, MD, Emmy award winning chief medical correspondent, author of Cheating Death, Chasing Life, and Monday Mornings. "It is gratifying to see another doctor in the field exploring the treasures of the doctor-patient relationship. There is no moment that more quickly sets aside our inhibitions and moves into the deeper aspects of human behaviors than these serious conversations with mortality. Dr. Scott Kelly explores the silence between words as he applies a sensitive eye to the emotional and spiritual currents that run underneath the interaction in the broad theatre of sickness and healing. A good read." --David Watts, MD, award winning author of Bedside Manners and The Orange Wire Problem"Scott's book says it all...What I've Learned from You can teach us all to learn from one another." --Bernie Siegle, MD, author of Love, Medicine, and Miracles and The Art of Healing."Scott's book is a treasure to the medical community and it should be required reading for every medical student." --Douglas Lundy, MD, Co-President of Resurgens Orthopaedics, Board of Directors-American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery
From the Back Cover "Kelly's memoir explores the idea that medicine not only mends the body, but can also heal the soul. This charming, touching collection of stories about medical work from a seasoned physician gives insights into the doctor-patient relationship. Kelly was driven to become a doctor by the feeling of security he experienced when attending a medical office as a child. Here, he considers the many lessons learned from his patients. From the shock of encountering his first cadaver in medical school--the instructor reminded the class that the body must be treated like that of a loved one--to the ache of losing a patient, Kelly recounts intimate conversations and situations that mark him as an attentive, compassionate professional. He writes of medical school and his first medical residency and recounts the learning curves, trials, and errors that characterized those years ("Chris was the first person I'd watched die right in front of me....And I felt like a failure for not being able to save him"). Though concerned with the tribulations and idiosyncrasies of the medical occupation specifically, the memoir shows how any profession in which one encounters the misfortunes and tragedies of strangers can drive one to be more empathetic. The book, then, is just as much an exploration of the meaning of life and morality in the face of mortality--a fact we are made all the more conscious of by illness and injury--as it is an exploration of the emotional trajectory of one man's experience of becoming a doctor. Deeply humane and eminently readable, this book provides a model for mutual understanding between doctors and those they treat. More than this, though, it emphasizes the importance of listening: to the voices, as well as the bodies, of others.An intelligent, sensitive reflection on the practice of medicine." Kirkus Book Review"We live in a world in which medical care seems more automated and less human. Doctors are busy, rushing, trying to care for all of their patients. Dr. Scott Kelly brings a refreshing perspective of medicine in which a doctor takes time to sit and talk with his patients, to really listen to what they have to say. Kelly brings us back to the original focus of medicine: the doctor and the patient together.Kelly begins keeping a journal during his third year of medical school. He learns much from his textbooks, but he learns the most from his patients. An attending physician tells his students, "Listen to your patients, young doctors, and they will tell you what is wrong with them."It may seem as if the patients in a waiting room are simply there for a physical examination, but they are waiting, nearly bursting, with a need to communicate what is inside them, not simply organs and tissues, but their passions, fears, and souls. One patient, Bernie, asks Dr. Kelly if he believes in the mind-body connection. This book is the realization of that connection. You cannot treat a patient's symptoms without treating the whole person."I realized I took away much more from the encounter than I had offered."When Dr. Kelly is a student, he sees a patient who had cut his leg badly, Walter, a former surgeon who retired due to Parkinson's disease. Walter asks Dr. Kelly to suture him without Kelly's attending physician. After getting permission, Dr. Kelly sutures the wound under Walter's direction. Dr. Kelly and his attending could simply treat Walter's wound, but instead they give him an opportunity to be a part of his healing, even to direct it. In this way, both Walter and his wound heal together.This book is filled with gems that will not only inspire a doctor in his or her own practice, but will inspire all of us to integrate these lessons into our own lives. For example, his patient, Sean, values being with his children more than his work. "The key is to leave the work at the office...Turn off the television. Put down the newspaper. Get down on the floor, to your children's level, and absorb yourself in their world...and be present--and not just in body. Give them your mind and your heart." Dr. Kelly says, "when I follow his advice, I am never disappointed."Star Rating - 5 out of 5 San Francisco Book Review"The doctor/patient relationship is one of the most intimate. Vulnerable, your health in their hands, you may feel powerless and subordinate. After years of schooling, residency, and intense training, doctors seem to know everything; many of them seem to think they do. Additionally, doctors are more overworked than ever and frequently the patient/doctor relationship fails. But this isn't always the case; every once in a while you meet a physician who takes the time to listen, who treats patients as individuals, personally. It is obvious that Scott Kelly, M.D. is such a physician, sincere when he says he feels honored to serve his patients. Dr. Kelly has written a beautiful memoir marked by humility and wonder as he recalls patients who have had a lasting impact on his life. Far from the pompous, omniscient, and aloof clinician, Kelly is all too aware of his own failings as he struggles, through medical school, residency, stints in the ER, and the tightrope balance between work and family. Although warned to keep his interactions with patients "strictly professional" (i.e., detached), he allows himself to open up to some of them, to listen, and then to learn. This book is his journey through those lessons."And it remains true -- regardless of the latest technologies we actively seek as physicians to improve quality of life and relieve pain -- that the most important tools physicians will ever have are our ears."The writing in this book is sensitive, marked with grace and absolute respect for his patients. Each of the short chapters begins with a personal memory; then Dr. Kelly introduces us to one of his patients. Each taught him an important lesson, on themes as varied as marriage, friendship, faith, happiness, responsibility, perseverance, grief, joy, and love. The book follows Dr. Kelly's experiences mostly chronologically, so you get to experience the highs and lows of his training and residency, as he learns to keep people in the center of practicing medicine, and through his articulate character sketches, you feel that you know his patients too, or that you wish you could have. You meet Joy, whose deep faith steadied Dr. Kelly in the face of man's inhumanity. Harrison reaffirmed the necessity of having a strong sense of purpose, and living true to yourself. Emily's chronic, but privately-endured, pain reminded him to be gentle and compassionate-we don't know the burdens other quietly carry. There are many others, each story told with love and sympathy, neither moralistic or pedantic. These are lessons we all, in our human endeavor, need to learn, and learn again."Star Rating - 5 out of 5 Manhattan Book Review
About the Author Paul McCarthy, Professor of Comparative Culture at Surugadai University in Japan, has translated work by Jun ichiro Tanizaki, Takeshi Umehara, Zenno Ishigami, and Atsushi Nakajima.
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Most helpful customer reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. A Must Read and Must Give Little Gem By Kem Lee A must read and must give for anyone in medicine.....even though I adore this book and I am not in medicine! Dr. Kelly truly bridges the gap between patients and doctors with his personal recount of learning the lessons of life from his patients. Dr. Kelly reminds the reader that doctors are learning too and that importantly medicine is humanizing. I enjoyed his patient stories and references from the past in medical school and residency. He ties it all together with his family life today. I believe med schools need to provide this little gem to all students-an important reminder that patients are not numbers but people with valuable voices as well.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. Excellent Excellent Read, very true to life ! By Cyrus Cooley This book was absolutely wonderful. I loved the reality of the writing and the true sincere storyline. It was truly written by a doctor who listened and learned the truths from his patients. I would highly suggest this as a great summer read and a great gift to pass on some of our much needed life's lessons! I have already posted it on my companies preferred reading list! Enjoy....
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. It's a great book for anyone By sdun Once I started this book, I couldn't put it down until I finished it. I bought 4 more for my sons and a couple of their friends in med school. It's a great book for anyone. Dr Kelly relates with grace many touching stories from med school, residency and private practice. Highly recommend this book!
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