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Hardcover The Man with the Iron Tattoo and Other True Tales of Uncommon Wisdom: What Our Patients Have Taught Us about Love, Faith and Healing Book

ISBN: 1932100962

ISBN13: 9781932100969

The Man with the Iron Tattoo and Other True Tales of Uncommon Wisdom: What Our Patients Have Taught Us about Love, Faith and Healing

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Viewing 15 medical cases through the eyes of two physicians during their internships and their first years of practice, this examination of Western medicine argues that doctors need to learn to deal more effectively and sensitively with medical and non-medical patient needs.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Not just required reading in medical schools

This wonderful book should be required reading in medical schools. I do not mean that this book is just for medical students. I am only stating that they should be required to read this book and learn that good medical practice requires listening with concern. The rest of us ought to read it for the pure pleasure of a great read. If your health care professionals are not at this level of competency or humanity, fire them and find ones like Castaldo and Levitt. An Expert Look at Love, Intimacy and Personal Growth

I love this book!

Were the great Hollywood film director alive, Frank Capra (It's a Wonderful Life) would have optioned this great book filled with life-affirming stories about ordinary people doing extraordinary things. Capra would have loved the multi-generational epic story of Anna. Sure this wonderful little book deals with life, death, and serious illness, but the reader is left feeling optimistic. And the authors inform, move, amuse, and amaze us. You can't make this stuff up. I hope they write a sequel. I'm buying this one for everyone on my long Christmas list.

A Shining Light

Unlike some of today's popular television shows about self-centered, arrogant doctors solving their cases with little patient interaction and a complete lack of emotion, "The Man with the IRON Tattoo" is a book about people and relationships. Albeit, this book alternates between distinctive true medical cases as experienced by two physicians, the message portrayed is different and one that isn't heard often enough by our community. It is a message about building positive relationships and showing compassion. The cases are initially similar to the television shows: nearly always, someone is dying for a reason that is sometimes immediately unexplainable, or possibly, a diagnosis can be made, but the outcome is known to be dismal even with appropriate treatment. The beliefs and interactions of the authors, however, take these emotive stories in an entirely new direction. And the real-life, real-people truth in each chapter makes these experiences so much more influential. In these non-fiction tales are split-second medical decisions that save lives, but there are also patients who die while in the care of their doctors. Even though not all of the chapters end with the corollary of a saved patient, each one ends with a heart-felt and sometimes gut-wrenching implication that respect, listening, communication, and compassion can change lives forever. And one of the forever changed lives portrayed in a chapter of this book is my own. It doesn't seem all that long ago, but I am a survivor of a traumatic brain injury and was comatose for more than ten days under the care of Lehigh Valley Hospital. I feel a pain in my chest and tear in my eye every time I read the story titled with my name, not because of the descriptions of my bloody and mangled self, but for the love of my father, who felt my injuries to a significantly greater extent than I did. Along with all of the pain that he endured, my father stayed with me and believed in me, even when it seemed like the entire remaining world had given up hope. With his determination at staying by my side, his daily conversations with me (although these were one-way exchanges, since I was unconscious), and his struggle with my doctors to give me a feeding tube even though the idea of a meaningful survival was dreary, my father willed me to live. And, at least towards the final days of my coma, I knew that my father was there fighting for me. And I needed to let him know that I knew. When I heard my dad ask me, his seemingly comatose son, to show him two fingers, I quickly shot out my whole arm along with two of my fingers pointing straight up at the ceiling and I held it there for what seemed like a very long time, just to show him that I could and to let him know that what he was doing was good. It is possible that I am alive today and currently able to speak and think coherently because my dad never gave up on me, because he communicated with me, and because my respect for him is paramount. O

A must read

I am biased of course as the son of the author. But, having read every word of this book, and lived its meaning growing up with the author I can most assuredly say that it is all true. The stories are meaningful and inspiring. They emphasize the value of interpersonal relationships and what we can learn from our fellow human being. In moments of suffering, the real priorities in life emerge and it is at these most fragile moments that the doctor patient relationship is so important. This book reaffirms confidence in that most important relationship. I hope many readers agree.

A must read for those looking to restore their faith in humanity

This vivid and riveting collection of true stories brings the anguish and anxiety a doctor feels for his patients to life for the reader. Each patient/hero in the 13 tales of uncommon wisdom pulls at the reader's own experiences of fear, desperation and hope. The stories may surprise the medical community as these doctors find cures, answers, treatments and many lessons in listening deeply to the patient's intangible messages. Sometimes this leads them in unconventional directions, but it always results in a restored faith in humanity. Castaldo and Levitt share heartfelt lessons of humility, forgiveness, love and faith that they have learned from their patients in their practice of neurology. The doctors inspire us with their compassion for the human soul and what they did not learn in their Ivy League medical schools which is "when the spirit dances, the body yearns to follow." In addition to leaving the reader wanting more stories to read by these two very special doctors, The Man with the Iron Tattoo will leave you hoping your doctor has read this book! A must read for all.
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