Summary:
Emergency Doctor is a riveting, informative account of the
workings of the Emergency Department at Bellevue Hospital in New York City, the
oldest public hospital in the country. On
any given day, tourists, residents, the wealthy and those who live in shelters
come to the Emergency Department, some with life threatening injuries and
others who need little more than a hot meal and a shower. No one is turned away.
Published in 1987, the book was written by a former editor
at Reader’s Digest in cooperation with Dr. Lewis Goldfrank, the former Director
of Emergency Services and a leading toxicologist. Goldfrank’s personal story of his path to
emergency medicine and his experience in creating the Emergency Department out
of what was once known as the Emergency Room frame the narrative, but the main
focus is on the day to day activities of the patients and staff in the Emergency Department. Because Bellevue is NYC’s main trauma center,
the book is rich with stories of trauma including construction accidents,
cardiac arrests, fires and suicide attempts among others. Even the title chapters-- "A Question of
Poison," "An Alkaloid Plague," "The Case of the Crazed Executives," for
example—convey the urgency and medical detective work needed for each person
who comes through the triage area.
“We don’t know if a patient is alive or dead when we first
see him,” Dr. Goldfrank says. “And we’re
never sure what we’re going to find, or what kind of emergency medicine we may
be called upon to practice—surgery, neurology, pediatrics, psychiatry, cardiology,
obstetrics. (p118)
Accident victims are stabilized in the trauma area and
rushed to the operating room. People with cancer, or TB, children who have been
abused, broken bones, suicide attempts, accidental or intentional poisoning and
overdoses—all must be evaluated and decisions made whether they should be
admitted to a medical floor, the operating room or perhaps kept for
observation.
Beyond medical expertise, however, working in the Emergency Department requires a large dose of compassion to cope with the needs of patients who rely
on the Emergency Department for basic care for their chronic conditions such as asthma, and social
services because they lack a place to live or have no means of support. Perhaps they need to detox from alcohol or have
mental health issues. “Emergency
medicine demands the most intense involvement personally and intellectually,”
observes Dr. Stephen Waxman. “Every area of clinical medicine is practiced, every
emotion is taxed.” (p 119)
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