Silence Kills

Speaking Out and Saving Lives

These stories explore a wide and complicated range of experiences—a doctor is pressured into sending a patient home from the emergency room but later must face his decision when the patient suddenly dies; a physician deals with the doubt brought on by a malpractice lawsuit and must come to terms with the fact that even doctors are fallible and human; a woman fights for her mother’s mental health against a system eager to over-medicate the elderly; and more—but all share one thing: a frustration with a system that hinders communication and often leads to unnecessary suffering. Silence Kills is also available unabridged in MP3 CD format, and as Issue #33 of Creative Nonfiction—please note that the book contains special essays not found in the journal issue.

Reviews

This compilation of life stories of people seeking treatment for illnesses accurately portrays the many aggravating factors that patients (and their families) face, along with their disease, as they encounter the U.S. health care system. The essays confirm the poor communication that often exists between health care providers themselves, providers and their patients, and representatives of agencies and payers. The book includes poignant descriptions of the effects of inadequate resources, lack of staff, multiple errors, and unsafe conditions within hospitals and other agencies that provide health care. – S. C. Grossman

– See more at: http://www.creativenonfiction.org/reviews/137#sthash.T2czP8jc.dpuf

—Association of College and Research Libraries

Devoted to the theme “Silence Kills: Speaking Out and Saving Lives,” this issue proves editor Lee Gutkind’s premise that “less literary” topics also lend themselves to artful writing as well as the detailed reporting associated with journalism. I agree wholeheartedly. In these essays, the authors recount their often frustrating—sometimes edifying—experiences with the health care system using a variety of narrative styles and tones, but all of a very high caliber. The authors treat such varied topics as blindness, overmedication, kidney dialysis, hepatitis, a gastrointestinal disorder; and all of the authors slip in enough medical information so that non-specialists can easily understand. Yet the overarching topic is communication—or lack thereof—and the implications this process has on the quality of patient care. – Jeanne M. Lesinski – See more at: http://www.creativenonfiction.org/reviews/140#sthash.4OAaMROg.dpuf

—New Pages