62d3a1a
|
How do you tell the psychiatrists from the patients in the hospital? The patients get better and leave.
|
|
medicine
|
Lisa Scottoline |
305514e
|
After you find out all the things that can go wrong, your life becomes less about living and more about waiting.
|
|
life
medical-training
palahniuk
physicians
doctors
medicine
disease
waiting
|
Chuck Palahniuk |
d4f93fd
|
Wherever the art of Medicine is loved, there is also a love of Humanity.
|
|
inspirational
medicine
|
Hippocrates |
fae1cb8
|
"Frostpine made a face. Lifting the cup, he dumped its contents down his throat. "Auugghh!" he yelled, his voice stronger than it had been since his return from the harbor. "Are you trying to kill me, woman?" "If I mean to kill someone, I do it," Rosethorn told him. "I don't try." --
|
|
medicine
|
Tamora Pierce |
b14de94
|
"She handed him a glass of water and two Aleve gelcaps. "They're anti-inflammatories. They will dull the pain a little bit and keep down swelling and redness. Swallow the pills, don't chew." "Well, I thought I'd stick them into my nose and impersonate a walrus, but if you insist, I'll swallow them."
|
|
funny
rose
medicine
|
Ilona Andrews |
2f1ed05
|
It is astounding to me, and achingly sad, that with eighty thousand people on the waiting list for donated hearts and livers and kidneys, with sixteen a day dying there on that list, that more then half of the people in the position H's family was in will say no, will choose to burn those organs or let them rot. We abide the surgeon's scalpel to save our own lives, out loved ones' lives, but not to save a stranger's life. H has no heart, but heartless is the last thing you'd call her.
|
|
life
medicine
|
Mary Roach |
4330736
|
In the words of the philosopher Sceptum, the founder of my profession: am I going to get paid for this?
|
|
money
humor
medicine
|
Terry Pratchett |
dd3b490
|
The night before brain surgery, I thought about death. I searched out my larger values, and I asked myself, if I was going to die, did I want to do it fighting and clawing or in peaceful surrender? What sort of character did I hope to show? Was I content with myself and what I had done with my life so far? I decided that I was essentially a good person, although I could have been better--but at the same time I understood that the cancer didn't care
|
|
mortality
bravery
morality
death
science
inspirational
cancer
doctors
belief
medicine
atheism
inevitable
knowledge
honor
|
Lance Armstrong |
35634f4
|
Though the doctors treated him, let his blood, and gave him medications to drink, he nevertheless recovered.
|
|
humor
medicine
|
Leo Tolstoy |
0e16e3a
|
I love the imagery of struggle. I sometimes wish I were suffering in a good cause, or risking my life for the good of others, instead of just being a gravely endangered patient. Allow me to inform you, though, that when you sit in a room with a set of other finalists, and kindly people bring a huge transparent bag of poison and plug it into your arm, and you either read or don't read a book while the venom sack gradually empties itself into your system, the image of the ardent solider is the very last one that will occur to you. You feel swamped with passivity and impotence: dissolving in powerlessness like a sugar lump in water.
|
|
medicine
|
Christopher Hitchens |
5a67088
|
"I saved a man's life once," said Granny. "Special medicine, twice a day. Boiled water with a bit of berry juice in it. Told him I'd bought it from the dwarves. That's the biggest part of doct'rin, really. Most people'll get over most things if they put their minds to it, you just have to give them an interest."
|
|
humor
healthy
medicine
|
Terry Pratchett |
e28f900
|
Despite all my public misconduct, in the past year, I had learned the Elemental spells, the Doppelschlaferin, and the preparation and flying of a magic broom; I had survived two months as prisoner of war, saving the life of captain Johanne in the process; I had escaped the dungeons of Fortress Drachensbett, and after an arduous journey successfully reunited with my double, so preserving her, and all Montagne, from Prince Flonian's rapacity, I would somehow master the despicable art of being a princess.
|
|
war
medicine
princess
|
Catherine Gilbert Murdock |
77fdb10
|
James Parkinson. George Huntington. Robert Graves. John Down. Now this Lou Gehrig fellow of mine. How did men come to monopolize disease names too?
|
|
men
medicine
|
Khaled Hosseini |
fb4d2f3
|
Gallows humor is part of having a doctor in the house. Deal with it.
|
|
humor
gallows-humor
medicine
|
J.R. Ward |
677a036
|
I have noticed that doctors who fail in the practice of medicine have a tendency to seek one another's company and aid in consultation.
|
|
wounded
doctors
practice
fail
wound
medicine
hospital
|
Ernest Hemingway |
45ee18e
|
Presque tous les hommes meurent de leurs remedes, et non pas de leurs maladies.
|
|
illness
medicine
remedies
|
Molière |
0223ad6
|
So ask me if I am alright. 'I'm fine; I'm always fine.' You see this look in my eyes. 'No, I'm fine. I am always fine.' There is a corpse behind my smile. 'Listen, I am fine. Always, always fine as fine can be.' 'Are you okay?' 'I am more than okay. I am more than fine. I am wonderful!
|
|
depression
friends
suicidal-thoughts
medicine
recovery
mental-illness
|
Emma Rose Kraus |
4249379
|
Like plumbing, medicine is a profession where you learn early on not to put your fingers in your mouth.
|
|
medicine
|
Diana Gabaldon |
ea73740
|
So, if you're a doctor, how can you recognize that you're having a feeling? Some tips from Dr. Zinn: Most emotions have physical counterparts. Anxiety may be associated with a tightness of the abdomen or excessive diaphoresis; anger may be manifested by a generalized muscle tightness or a clenching of the jaw; sexual arousal may be noted by a tingling of the loins or piloerection; and sadness may be felt by conjunctival injection or heaviness of the chest.
|
|
medicine
|
Anne Fadiman |
aa2ebe8
|
In a sense, the Earth is mounting an immune response against the human species. It is beginning to react to the human parasite, the flooding infection of people, the dead spots of the concrete all over the planet, the cancerous rot-outs in Europe, Japan and the United States, thick with replicating primates, the colonies enlarging and spreading and threatening to shock the biosphere with mass extinctions. Perhaps the biosphere does not 'like' the idea of five billion humans.
|
|
nature
science
the-hot-zone
virus
medicine
|
Richard Preston |
d8290ac
|
Primenenie protivozachatochnykh sredstv inogda kritikuiut kak <>. Da, eto tak -- ochen' protivoestestvennoe. Beda v tom, chto protivoestestvenno i vseobshchee blagosostoianie. Ia dumaiu, chto bol'shinstvo iz nas schitaet vseobshchee blagosostoianie v vysshei stepeni zhelatel'nym. Nevozmozhno, odnako, dobit'sia protivoestestvennogo vseobshchego blagosostoianiia, esli ne poiti pri etom takzhe na protivoestestvennuiu reguliatsiiu rozhdaemosti, tak kak eto privedet k eshche bol'shim nevzgodam, chem sushchestvuiushchie v prirode.
|
|
philosophy
medicine
|
Richard Dawkins |
f162388
|
I belong to a culture that includes Proust, Henry James, Tchaikovsky, Cole Porter, Plato, Socrates, Aristotle, Alexander the Great, Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Christopher Marlowe, Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, Tennessee Williams, Byron, E.M. Forster, Lorca, Auden, Francis Bacon, James Baldwin, Harry Stack Sullivan, John Maynard Keynes, Dag Hammarskjold... These are not invisible men. Poor Bruce. Poor frightened Bruce. Once upon a time you wanted to be a soldier. Bruce, did you know that an openly gay Englishman was as responsible as any man for winning the Second World War? His name was Alan Turing and he cracked the Germans' Enigma code so the Allies knew in advance what the Nazis were going to do -- and when the war was over he committed suicide he was so hounded for being gay. Why don't they teach any of this in the schools? If they did, maybe he wouldn't have killed himself and maybe you wouldn't be so terrified of who you are. The only way we'll have real pride is when we demand recognition of a culture that isn't just sexual. It's all there--all through history we've been there; but we have to claim it, and identify who was in it, and articulate what's in our minds and hearts and all our creative contributions to this earth. And until we do that, and until we organize ourselves block by neighborhood by city by state into a united visible community that fights back, we're doomed. That's how I want to be defined: as one of the men who fought the war.
|
|
equality
relationships
love
lgbtq
homosexual
medicine
gay
epidemic
|
Larry Kramer |
4718197
|
This original version of Coca-Cola contained a small amount of coca extract and therefore a trace of cocaine. (It was eliminated early in the twentieth century, though other extracts derived from coca leaves remain part of the drink to this day.) Its creation was not the accidental concoction of an amateur experimenting in his garden, but the deliberate and painstaking culmination of months of work by an experienced maker of quack remedies.
|
|
cocaine
quack-remedies
medicine
|
Tom Standage |
46444c1
|
Arguably the greatest technological triumph of the century has been the public-health system, which is sophisticated preventive and investigative medicine organized around mostly low- and medium-tech equipment; ... fully half of us are alive today because of the improvements.
|
|
science
life
triumph
public-health
medicine
technology
|
Richard Rhodes |
3fbf356
|
"A large piece of lead floated out of Bobby head, followed by dark chunks of what could only be pieces of Bobby's brain. The torrent started up again. It flowed steady rather than pulsed with his heart. I knew from that, and from the amount of blood, that it was that mofo vein bleeding. And probably more than a small tear if the amount of blood was telling. I thought there had to be a hole the size of Montana in that thing. "Jesus Mother Mary" I said, then "Stitch!" The scrub tech slapped a needle holder into my palm, a curved needle and silk stitch clamped into the end of it. I might have closed my eyes--I've been told I do that sometimes in surgery when I'm trying to visualize something--though if so I don't remember doing it. I took that needle and aimed it into the pool of blood. "Suck here Joe, right here." When I thought I could see something, something gray and not black red, I plunged the pointy end of the needle through whatever the visible tissue was and looped it out again. I cinched it down and tied it quick, then repeated the maneuver again after adjusting slightly for lighting, sweating, my own bounding heartbeat, and the regret I wasn't wearing my own diaper. We're losing, I thought."
|
|
medical-fiction
novella
surgery
medicine
|
Edison McDaniels |
594dbdb
|
In the latter months of his own long sickness the Master Herbal had taught him much of the healer's lore, and the first lesson and the last of all that lore was this: Heal the wound and cure the illness, but let the dying spirit go.
|
|
death-and-dying
palliative-care
healing
medicine
|
Ursula K. Le Guin |
7fd0a54
|
A new doctor had been sent for, Lazzaro of Pavia, who had administered to Lorenzo a pulverized mixture of diamonds and pearls. This hitherto infallible medicine had failed to help.
|
|
humor
medicine
|
Irving Stone |
ee7460b
|
"It must be dawn, and the last breath went out of this body on the table - how long before? Irretrievably gone from this world, as dead as though she had lived a thousand years ago. Men have cut the isthmus of Panama and joined the two oceans; they have bored tunnels that run below rivers; built aluminum planes that fly from Frisco to Manila; sent music over the air and photographs over wires; but never, when the heartbeat of their own kind has once stopped, never when the spark of life has fled, have they been able to reanimate the mortal clay with that commonest yet most mysterious of all processes; the vital force. And this man thinks he can - this man alone, out of all the world's teeming billions! ("Jane Brown's Body")"
|
|
progress
science
medicine
|
Cornell Woolrich |
c699594
|
Another explanation for the failure of logic and observation alone to advance medicine is that unlike, say, physics, which uses a form of logic - mathematics - as its natural language, biology does not lend itself to logic. Leo Szilard, a prominent physicist, made this point when he complained that after switching from physics to biology he never had a peaceful bath again. As a physicist he would soak in the warmth of a bathtub and contemplate a problem, turn it in his mind, reason his way through it. But once he became a biologist, he constantly had to climb out of the bathtub to look up a fact.
|
|
science
medicine
|
John M. Barry |
e0cea5f
|
What could we do? What should we do? 'There are no prescriptions,' Luria wrote, 'in a case like this. Do whatever your ingenuity and your heart suggest. There is little or no hope of any recovery in his memory. But a man does not consist of memory alone. He has feeling, will, sensibilities, moral being - matters of which neuropsychology cannot speak. And it is here, beyond the realm of an impersonal psychology, that you may find ways to touch him, and change him. [...] Neuropsychologically, there is little or nothing you can do; but in the realm of the Individual, there may be much you can do.
|
|
neurology
medicine
psychology
|
Oliver Sacks |
4046163
|
"As a recent editorial in the Journal of Clinical Oncology put it: "What we must first remember is that the immune system is designed to detect foreign invaders, and avoid out own cells. With few exceptions, the immune system does not appear to recognize cancers within an individual as foreign, because they are actually part of the self."
|
|
positive-thinking
clinical-oncology
oncology
cancer
medicine
immune-system
psychology
|
Barbara Ehrenreich |
054158f
|
"I put the word "diagnosis" in quotes because I have not yet seen that case in which a "diagnosis" led to a "cure," or in fact to any outcome other than a confirmed, and therefore an enforced, debility."
|
|
diagnosis
medicine
health
|
Joan Didion |
6fae1fb
|
I am not sure,' Mordecai told Thomas, 'whether omens can be trusted.' 'Of course they can.' 'I should like to hear your reasons. But show me your urine first.' 'You said I was cured,' Thomas protested. 'Eternal vigilance, dear Thomas, is the price of health. Piss for me.
|
|
medicine
|
Bernard Cornwell |
88008a4
|
He wasn't a patient. I expect someone cured him. You cure a lot of people in this country, don't you, with bullets?
|
|
medicine
méxico
|
Graham Greene |
80abc88
|
But if love is not the cure, it certainly can act as a very strong medicine. As John Donne has written; it is not so pure and abstract as one might once have thought and wished, but it does endure and it does grow.
|
|
love
medicine
|
Kay Redfield Jamison |
6929815
|
"It's bad enough when they refer to medical science as 'an inexact science,' " says the Mother. "But when they start referring to it as 'an art,' I get extremely nervous."
|
|
medicine
|
Lorrie Moore |
996baa2
|
"Okay, Croaker. What the hell happened?" "I don't know. The falling sickness?" "Give him some of his own soup," somebody suggested. "Serve him right." A tin cup appeared. We forced its contents down his throat. His eye clicked open. "What are you trying to do? Poison me? Feh! What was that? Boiled sewage?" "Your soup," I told him."
|
|
medicine
|
Glen Cook |
30d653b
|
Perhaps the greatest danger in the way that alternative therapists behave is simply the promotion of their own treatments when patients should be in the care of a conventional doctor. There are numerous reports of patients with serious conditions (e.g. diabetes, cancer, AIDS) suffering harm after following irresponsible advice form alternative practitioners instead of following the advice of a doctor.
|
|
scinece
treatment
medicine
|
Simon Singh |
5b323d2
|
Though everyone may yearn for a tranquil death, the basic instinct to stay alive is a far more powerful force
|
|
medicine
|
Sherwin B. Nuland |
3145cad
|
"A large piece of lead floated out of Bobby head, followed by dark chunks of what could only be pieces of Bobby's brain. The torrent started up again. It flowed steady rather than pulsed with his heart. I knew from that, and from the amount of blood, that it was that mofo vein bleeding. And probably more than a small tear if the amount of blood was telling. I thought there had to be a hole the size of Montana in that thing. "Jesus Mother Mary" I said, then "Stitch!" The scrub tech slapped a needle holder into my palm, a curved needle and silk stitch clamped into the end of it. I might have closed my eyes--I've been told I do that sometimes in surgery when I'm trying to visualize something--though if so I don't remember doing it. I took that needle and aimed it into the pool of blood. "Suck here Joe, right here." When I thought I could see something, something gray and not black red, I plunged the pointy end of the needle through whatever the visible tissue was and looped it out again. I cinched it down and tied it quick, then repeated the maneuver again after adjusting slightly for lighting, sweating, my own bounding heartbeat, and the regret I wasn't wearing my own diaper. We're losing, I thought."
|
|
medical-fiction
surgery
medicine
|
Edison McDaniels |
a316a9f
|
A theory is like medicine (or government): often useless, sometimes necessary, always self-serving, and on occasion lethal. So it needs to be used with care, moderation and close adult supervision.
|
|
theory
necessary
lethal
self-serving
supervision
useless
medicine
|
Nassim Nicholas Taleb |