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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Fergus ShanahanPublisher: Liberties Press Ltd Imprint: Liberties Press Ltd ISBN: 9781912589159ISBN 10: 191258915 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 15 September 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsan impressive work that cuts through the dross of medical parlance and captures our everyday tragedies with compassion --Prof. Garret A. Fitzgerald, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania A scholarly yet accessible dissection of the toxic influence of language on medical care, this book should be mandatory reading for all healthcare professionals, and also for all patients and future patients. ----Liam Farrell, medical journalist, former GP and author of Are You the F**king Doctor? Absolutely delightful . . . . Elegant, wears its considerable learning lightly . . . and [constitutes] a classic addition to the literature. --Prof. Desmond O'Neill is Director of the National Office for Traffic Medicine In the midst of global pandemic, health and disease have dominated the airwaves and daily conversation. . . . There could be no better time to publish a book exploring how we talk about disease and illness. . . . In a thought-provoking and engaging book, pitched at 'anyone who cares about caring', Shanahan has drawn on his experience as a physician and father to a seriously ill son. He combines a rich selection of literature . . . to reflect on how the language we use shapes doctor-patient interactions, patient and carer experiences, public health, and health-systems management. . . . a sweeping tour de force. --Dr Deirdre Bennett is Head of the Medical Education Unit in University College Cork This book is a treasure, compulsory and compulsive reading for everyone in the caring way - and isn't that all of us? Caring, or being cared for. Doctor Shanahan, with precision, humour and concern, examines 'the words that turn people into patients . . . healing words, hurting words'. He demonstrates, with wisdom and learning and humanity, how patient and doctor, speaking the same language, work better together. . . . An accessible, inviting book: warm, empathetic and deeply compassionate. --John F. Deane is a poet, and founder of Poetry Ireland and the Dedalus Press This book . . . is an exercise in erudition that acquaints the reader with the often over-looked thoughts of medical authors, as well as providing the enlightening perspective on the doctor's lack of communicative skill as portrayed in the great works of literature. . . . A fascinating read. . . . A tour de force. --Eoin O'Brien, author and clinical scientist In his excellent book . . . Professor Fergus Shanahan provides an important explanation for the frequent failure of generally well-intentioned medics to provide a better caring experience for their patients. . . . Beyond the carefully and elegantly constructed arguments, it provides a wonderful anthology of writing about life, health, dying and caring. . . . It should be on the mandatory reading list for students of medicine, nursing and all caring professions, and will be of enormous interest to patients and their family members. --Professor John Crown is consultant medical oncologist at St Vincent's Private Hospital in Dublin. He served in Seanad Eireann from 2011 to 2016. A fascinating and sensitive exploration of the difference between the 'illness language' characteristic of a patient's subjective awareness of their illness, suffering and fear, and the medical practitioner's objective consideration of their disease. . . . I recommend it strongly, not just to front-line medical personnel, but also to the rest of us who are, or will, sooner or later, be, ill. --Patrick Masterson, Emeritus Professor, University College Dublin The Language of Illness is a 'must read' for all medical students and doctors in training, and for medical educators. Professor Shanahan discusses, in a warm, insightful and humorous manner, the particularly challenging topic of how and why doctors, health-service managers and policymakers continue to communicate poorly with patients. Drawing on a lifetime of experience as a physician, he offers invaluable, realistic and practical solutions as to how we can adapt the language that we use to improve our 'conversation time' with patients. ----Prof. Deirdre McGrath, Head of School, School of Medicine, University of Limerick --Liam Farrell, medical journalist, former GP and author of Are You the F**king Doctor? The Language of Illness is one of the most worthwhile books I've seen in medicine. It is wise, bright, witty, and brimming with insights. . . . The epilogue, and its matching discussion earlier - not to mention the brief appearance by Madonna - is worth the price of admission on its own. --John Sotos, MD, author of The Physical Lincoln Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |