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The Best Care Possible

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Administration Medicine Economics
Tuesday, September 3, 2013

The Best Care Possible: A Physician's Quest to Transform Care Through the End of Life Paperback – March 5, 2013

Author: Ira Byock MD | Language: English | ISBN: 1583335129 | Format: PDF, EPUB

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The Best Care Possible: A Physician's Quest to Transform Care Through the End of Life – March 5, 2013
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Review

“There is no palliative care physician for whom I have more respect and admiration than Ira Byock. In this strikingly important book, Byock presents an agenda for end-of-life care that should serve as an ideal template on which to build our best hopes for the final days of those we love and ourselves—and a corrective for our society.” —Sherwin B. Nuland, MD, Yale Interdisciplinary Center for Bioethics and author of How We Die

"With elegance, compassion, and energy, Ira Byock shows us how to get the best end of life care. He is a great storyteller and a brilliant analyst of health care in America. This is the book to read or give, if you are facing this hard situation. Nobody gets out of this life alive, but Byock shows us how to do it elegantly and well." —Jane Isay, author of Walking on Eggshells

"This is an extraordinary and wise book on how dying people can be cared for. Written by a master clinician, a man of great compassion, Ira Byock has a vision of health care that is brilliant and kind." —Roshi Joan Halifax, Abbot, Upaya Zen Center, Sante Fe, author of Being with Dying

"In a world in which politics are polarized and ethical discussions often descend into a food fight, Ira Byock is that rare doctor: a humane guide leading us with honesty and compassion through complex stories about living and dying well. He's a real-life rebuke to those who think palliative doctors are "death panels" and a mentor to every medical student inevitably faced with mortality. This is must reading for everyone trying to make humane decisions in a high tech world." —Ellen Goodman, longtime syndicated columnist for The Boston Globe

“At a time when a long life can become a curse as readily as a blessing, this lucid and compassionate book points the way to more humane treatment of a life’s last days.” —Rabbi Harold Kushner, author of When Bad Things Happen to Good People

“The baby boom generation has transformed every stage of live we’ve touched. We’re now transforming the dying process. And Dr. Byock is leading the way… brilliantly!” —Christiane Northrup, MD, ob/gyn and author of the New York Times bestselling Women’s Bodies, Women’s Wisdom and The Wisdom of Menopause

"A magnificent, moving, and deeply important work. Ira Byock is a trailblazer whose life’s work has forever changed the way we view dying in this country. But there’s much more to be done. The Best Care Possible is Byock’s urgent and passionate call to action for the nation. This book is a must-read for anyone who thinks there’s even a possibility that they someday might die.” —Dave Isay, founder of StoryCorps, author-editor of Listening Is an Act of Love

“In a world of sound bites, end-of-life concerns are framed politically with emotionally charged rhetoric. Above the clamor, Dr. Byock writes a compelling case for consistent, compassionate, and enduring palliative care for all people as they reach the winter of their lives. Through vignettes he outlines the challenges for the patient, the caregivers, and the medical community, and ably advocates a revolution of care for the end of life. This is a revolution sorely needed and worth fighting for.” —Pastor Robert Fleischmann, National Director, Christian Life Resources

“Dr. Byock, one of the country’s leading experts in palliative care, shares his wisdom and insights on how to get the best care possible when we are confronted with a potentially life-limiting illness. When my own mother was seriously ill, Ira’s words helped our family make the right choices and make sure she got the care she wanted – and no more – during her last months. His words can help you.” —Elliott S. Fisher, MD, MPH, Director of Population Health and Policy, The Dartmouth Institute

“In The Best Care Possible, Ira Byock tells us why we need to move beyond medicine’s fixation on conquering death to a vision of end-of-life care focused on the quality of the patient’s experience. This is a beautifully written, highly personal account that makes real the struggle of patients and families to escape the “high-tech”, more is better imperative that dominates the American way of death. It provides compelling examples of how the physician, committed to reform, can help patients achieve the care they want and need. But Byock goes further: he makes the case that professional reform is only part of the solution; overcoming the medicalization of death will require the mobilization of the wider community in the support of the dying (and those with chronic illness).”—Jack Wennberg, MD author of Tracking Medicine: a Researcher’s Quest to Understand Health Care

“This is a profoundly truthful book. Ira Byock uses powerful stories about real people to explain the complications, nuances and often absurdity of advanced illness in 21st century America. He shows how courage, shared decisions, wise doctors and nurses and palliative care can make the difference. Above all, he calls for a cultural transformation, so we can deal with the end of life as individuals, families and society. Who should read it? All of us who are mortal.” —Bill Novelli, Professor, Georgetown University and co-chair, the Coalition to Transform Advanced Care (and former CEO, AARP)

“Dr. Byock lets the stories of patients, families, and medical colleagues open windows into the heart of the issues. He leads the reader captivatingly from story to story to see and feel what the best care through the end of life can be and deftly invites our nation to envision the best care for our culturally diverse society and cultures. Dr. Byock captures the fundamental human impulse to care lovingly for one another at the most sacred and privileged moments of our lives…now and through the end of life.”—David Lichter, D.Min., Executive Director, National Association of Catholic Chaplains

“Dr. Byock’s book rejuvenates me. In allowing us the special privilege of entering the sacred space of their final journey, people teach us precious lessons about ourselves. Dr. Byock has a gift of sharing the lessons he’s learned in a most readable narrative marked by compassion, love of life, and lucidity.” —Rabbi Bunny Freedman, Founding Director of Jewish Hospice & Chaplaincy Network

About the Author

Ira Byock, M.D., is director of Palliative Medicine at Dartmouth- Hitchcock Medical Center and a professor at Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth. He lives in Enfield, New Hampshire.

Books with free ebook downloads available The Best Care Possible: A Physician's Quest to Transform Care Through the End of Life – March 5, 2013
  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Avery Trade; 1 edition (March 5, 2013)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1583335129
  • ISBN-13: 978-1583335123
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.4 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #102,945 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
    • #20 in Books > Medical Books > Medicine > Hospice Care
    • #52 in Books > Medical Books > Administration & Medicine Economics > Health Policy
Dr Ira Byock's new book, "The Best Care Possible" is one doctor's look at the inevitability we all face - death. Like taxes, death is a by-product of life and a "good death", while seemingly an oxymoron, is something Dr Byock has been writing about for many years. An "end-of-life" specialist at New Hampshire's Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Ira Byock works with a team to put together as good and gentle a death experience as possible for his patients.

Byock writes, that as we baby-boomers age, we're facing both the inevitable deaths of two generations - our parents, and then, in our turn, ourselves. As overall medical treatments advance, we're living longer and what used to kill us at earlier ages, doesn't do that so much anymore. And we're not dying as often in a family-setting. Most deaths occur in hospitals and nursing homes, with the dying tied up to machines that often keep them alive far past the point most people want to be kept alive. The old conundrum of "quality of life" vs "quantity of life".

Dr Byock's book is not a "how-to" guide to making a "good death". There are no steps he advises taking, but rather he speaks to the larger issue, from both a medical standpoint and a personal one. As a doctor in a smallish community, Byock often has to look at both views when treating his patients. He writes about teaching medical students at Dartmouth Medical School to be aware of the responsibilities as future doctors when medical treatments fail at arresting illness and the patient moves on toward death. And when advanced chemo might be granting a cancer patient a somewhat longer life span but at the cost of agonising side effects. When does a "good life" sequence into a "good death"?
The Best Care Possible: A Physician's Quest to Transform Care Through the End of Life

There is a first time for everything, inclusive of posting comments to Amazon. Despite many years of online buying and hundreds of purchases, I admit to not having left a comment--until now. It's about time. Dr. Byock is compelling.

I literally know of no colleague in the field of bioethics who would admit to not having read Ira Byock's first book, Dying Well. It already has become a classic in our field. Dr. Byock's third book may well become another of that sort. He writes that well.

Who among us doesn't long for "the best care possible" when in need of health care for ourselves and those we love? The medical students and residents I teach and providers for whom I consult all strive for excellence in that regard. Why then does it elude us as a society? Why do so many of our elders and children still slip through the cracks of a notoriously expensive healthcare system with some of the best facilities and resources in the world? It is something of an enigma. Ira Byock is one of few people I know who can take this on with integrity and intelligence, grounded in decades of hands on, in the trenches, clinical experience.

We all have read and heard enough nonsense during recent years of highly politicized "healthcare reform" debates. It is refreshing then to read something provocative that also makes good sense. Byock tells a good story, of course. "Masterful" is the adjective that comes to mind. But this book is more than gripping narrative. It is an insightful ethics analysis and a rational policy proposal.

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