Practicing While Human
  Practicing While Human
Titolo Practicing While Human
AutoreRyan Nadelson
Prezzo€ 24,95
EditoreAmerican Association for Physician Leadership
LinguaTesto in
FormatoAdobe DRM

Descrizione
Modern medicine asks physicians to be flawless while quietly dismantling the conditions that once made good medicine possible. We are measured constantly - by dashboards, checklists, and thresholds - yet rarely given the time, trust, or space required to think clearly, listen deeply, or remain present with those who need us most. In that compression, clinical judgment erodes - and with it, the trust at the heart of care. In Practicing While Human, Ryan Nadelson, MD, - a practicing internal medicine physician and department chair - offers an unflinching, deeply human account of what it means to care for patients inside today's healthcare system. Through vivid frontline stories and precise policy insight, he explores the quiet moral tension at the center of modern practice: the widening gap between what medicine asks of physicians and what it allows them to give. This is not a book about burnout as personal failure, nor resilience as individual heroism. It is a witness account of structural strain - how relentless metrics, documentation demands, insurer interference, and shifting regulations reshape clinical judgment, fracture presence, and subtly rewire how physicians think, decide, and relate. Nadelson shows how the white coat becomes both shield and burden, offering authority while quietly isolating those who wear it. Blending memoir, cultural critique, and practical leadership reflection, Practicing While Human examines the emotional labor physicians carry behind closed exam-room doors, the cost of practicing under constant surveillance, and the quiet grief of knowing what good care should look like - and being unable to deliver it. In moments as small as hesitating before clicking "submit" on a note, Nadelson captures how systems designed to measure care can begin to replace it. Arriving at a moment of profound transition - amid shifting Medicare Advantage measures, telemedicine cliffs, and a deepening identity crisis in primary care - this book offers neither false optimism nor easy fixes. Instead, it offers something rarer and more necessary: clarity without cynicism, validation without grievance, and a humane path forward. For physicians, physician leaders, trainees, and anyone seeking to understand the human cost of modern healthcare, Practicing While Human is both a mirror and a map - an urgent reminder that medicine cannot be healed without first allowing its clinicians to remain human.