Direct download links available Broken Hearts: The Tangled History of Cardiac Care – December 26, 2012 for everyone book mediafire, rapishare, and mirror link
Review
Offers a historical perspective on medical decision making in the case of heart disease.
(
The Chronicle Review)
For anyone who has had a heart attack or whose family member has had one, this book is definitely worth reading.
(Stephen Goddard
History Wire - Where the Past Comes Alive)
Any health collection strong in cardiac care will find this a winning presentation perfect for general health or specialty collections alike.
(
Midwest Book Review)
The light Jones shines on the interventional cardiovascular enterprise illuminates numerous, sometimes fatal and always costly flaws that every patient and society at large ignores at great peril.
(Nortin M. Hadler
Scientists' Bookshelf)
A surprising and sobering book. David S. Jones combines rigorous research with a clear narrative style to produce a very persuasive historical analysis. I heartily recommend that physicians read Broken Hearts to benefit from a dose of detective work, a dose of insight, and a good dose of humility.
(Jack Coulehan, MD
Pharos)
Jones does a very good job of outlining how difficult it is to understand all the workings of the human body, what is involved in medical research, and how that research is applied to human subjects through the lens of one medical specialty.
(Katherine Burger Johnson
Watermark)
All in all, Jones presents a different and refreshing take on the challenges before us. He provides more questions than answers, but this is all to the good. Unless we pose the proper questions we cannot ever hope to obtain the right answers.
(Allen B. Weisse
Bulletin of the History of Medicine)
Wide-ranging, full of interesting and telling historical details, steadily paced yet thorough in its making sense of complex medicine, Broken Hearts exposes cardiac care as neither mundane nor settled.
(Janet K. Shim
Sociology of Health and Illness)
Jones asks us to embrace the complexity of medical decision-making, to recognize medical research gains and gaps, and to acknowledge the social values and priorities that shape our present scenario. Difficult decisions in medicine remain, but perhaps Jones’s book will contribute to more judicious ones.
(Shelley Mckellar
Technology and Culture)
For the past half century, patients have been advised to undergo valve replacement, angioplasty, or coronary artery bypass graft procedures to prevent or ameliorate cardiac pathologies. But how good are these procedures? How certain are the surgeons or physicians who recommend them that they will work? How do they know? Giving some answers to these questions and showing how the criteria for making medical decisions change over time are the themes of Broken Hearts.
(
Choice)
Jones’s larger point is a meditation on how we understand and misunderstand medical knowledge.
(Sarah Dine
Health Affairs)
Very informative and containing important insights, Broken Hearts is thoroughly researched, well written, and the only work of its kind dealing with these treatments of heart disease.
(Christopher Lawrence, University College London)
This book will appeal to a wide audience interested in the history of coronary artery disease, its treatment options, and medical decision-making. For those wanting more, there is an extensive bibliography. In closing, Jones asks us to embrace the complexity of medical decision-making, to recognize medical research gains and gaps, and to acknowledge the social values and priorities that shape our present scenario. Difficult decisions in medicine remain, but perhaps Jones's book will contribute to more judicious ones.
(Shelley McKellar
Technology and Culture)
From the Back Cover
Still the leading cause of death worldwide, heart disease challenges researchers, clinicians, and patients alike. Each day, thousands of patients and their doctors make decisions about coronary angioplasty and bypass surgery. David S. Jones sheds light on the nature and quality of those decisions. Why do doctors and patients overestimate the effectiveness and underestimate the dangers of medical interventions, especially when doing so may lead to the overuse of medical therapies? To answer this question, Jones explores the history of cardiology and cardiac surgery in the United States and probes the ambiguities and inconsistencies in medical decision making.
"Wide-ranging, full of interesting and telling historical details, steadily paced yet thorough in its making sense of complex medicine, Broken Hearts exposes cardiac care as neither mundane nor settled."— Sociology of Health and Illness
"A surprising and sobering book. David Jones combines rigorous research with a clear narrative style to produce a very persuasive historical analysis. I heartily recommend that physicians read Broken Hearts to benefit from a dose of detective work, a dose of insight, and a good dose of humility."— The Pharos
"Jones presents a different and refreshing take on the challenges before us. He provides more questions than answers, but this is all to the good. Unless we pose the proper questions we cannot ever hope to obtain the right answers."— Bulletin of the History of Medicine
"Jones asks us to embrace the complexity of medical decision making, to recognize medical research gains and gaps, and to acknowledge the social values and priorities that shape our present scenario. Difficult decisions in medicine remain, but perhaps Jones’s book will contribute to more judicious ones."— Technology and Culture
"Jones’s larger point is a meditation on how we understand and misunderstand medical knowledge."— Health Affairs
See all Editorial Reviews
Books with free ebook downloads available Broken Hearts: The Tangled History of Cardiac Care Hardcover – December 26, 2012