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The emergency : a year of healing and heartbreak in a Chicago ER / by Thomas Fisher.

Summary:
"Thomas Fisher was raised on the South Side of Chicago and even as a kid understood how close death could feel-he came from a family of pioneering doctors who believed in staying in the community, but on those streets he saw just how vulnerable Black bodies could be. Determined to follow his family's legacy, Fisher studied public health at Dartmouth and Harvard, then returned to the University of Chicago Medical School. As soon as he graduated, he began working in the ER that served his South Side community. Even as his career took him to stints at the White House, working on what would eventually become the Affordable Care Act and helping develop HMOs for underserved communities, he never gave up his ER rotations. He knew that to really understand healthcare disparities and medical needs, you had to stay close. The emergency room is designed for the most urgent cases, but it is often the first resort for South Side residents without any other choice. Fisher deals with those patients with necessary dispatch, but what he really wants to do is to spend his time helping them understand how it is they ended up in the ER-talk to them about the role economics plays in their health; the history of healthcare for the poor and marginalized; why Black people in particular distrust the medical profession; why they don't have a personal physician; the effect of food deserts and education gaps on their health; and, most of all, why they live in a society that has deemed their bodies and lives as less important than others. In this book he gets to have those lost conversations. This is the story of a dramatic year in the life of the Chicago ER-a year of an unprecedented pandemic and a ferocious epidemic of homicides-interwoven with the primer in healthcare one doctor wishes he could give his patients. Full of day-to-day drama, heartbreaking stories, compelling personal narrative, and penetrating analysis of our most fundamental failure as a society, this is a page-turning and mind-opening work that will offer readers a fresh vision of healthcare as a foundation of social justice"-- Provided by publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780593230671
  • ISBN: 0593230671
  • Physical Description: xvi, 254 pages ; 22 cm
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : One World, [2022]

Content descriptions

General Note:
Includes index.
Subject: African Americans > Medical care.
African Americans > Health and hygiene.
Minorities > Medical care.
Social medicine.
Discrimination in medical care.
Equality > Health aspects.
Hospitals > Emergency services.

Available copies

  • 21 of 21 copies available at SPARK Libraries.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 21 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Abington Community Library 362.1 FISHER (Text) 50687011773937 Adult Nonfiction Available -
Albright Memorial Library 362.1 FISHER (Text) 50686016152204 Adult Nonfiction Available -
Altoona Area Public Library 362.1089 FIS (Text) 33240004956549 Adult Nonfiction Available -
BCPL - Headquarters FC 362.1089 FIS (Text) 33249025307756 Non-fiction Available -
Cambria County Library 362.1089 F536e (Text) 85131001816439 CACM Non-Fiction Available -
Carbondale Public Library 362.1 FISHER (Text) 50688010812775 Adult Nonfiction Available -
Dillsburg Area Public Library Adults 362.1 FIS Nonfiction (Text) 34001001410230 Adult Area Available -
Green Free Library (Wellsboro) 362.1089 FIS (Text) 92525315 GFWM Main Room Available -
Indian Valley Public Library 362.1089 Fisher Health (Text) 39427103655692 Nonfiction Room: Adult Nonfiction Available -
Juniata County Library 362.108 FIS (Text) 39640100630902 JUNM Non-Fiction Available -


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