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by William Hanson
from Palgrave Macmillan

| | | List Price: | $24.95 | | Price: | $16.47 | | You save: | $8.48 (33%) | | | Media: | Hardcover | | Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
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Editorial ReviewExperts agree that we are entering the Golden Age of Medicine, when our everyday experience of being ill and getting better will be more like science fiction than today's routine trip to the doctor. Bill Hanson, director of the surgical intensive care unit at the University of Pennsylvania Medical Center and an inventor of medical technology, offers true-life and intensely intimate stories about the way biotechnology is changing people's lives. · An electronic nose that detects infection, such as pneumonia, based on a person's breath · Robots with appendages that can feel their way around tissue, which will augment the hands of surgeons in the operating room · Computer health wizards that will advise and prescribe through your home computer · Computerized psychotherapists dispensing advice about emotional problems · Telehealth software that serves as a monitoring nurse for difficult to manage chronic illnesses such as diabetes. · Wheelchairs operated by reading electrical brainwaves for patients with severe neurological deterioration. Bill Hanson describes the human genius that arrived at these amazing discoveries, and how innovators are working to take these feats to an even more technologically advanced level. And more importantly, he discusses what the human experience will be and how we can prepare ourselves for the moral and ethical challenges that these awesome changes will bring. This riveting and startling account will make us revise our expectations of our own mortality.
Customer Reviews:
- Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 / 5.0

- A future definitely worth striving for

There is nothing in the twenty-first century that is uninteresting, and after finishing this book the opinion that this is the best time to be alive is reinforced. The advances in medicine that were predicted to occur just a decade ago have proven to be a gross underestimate, as this book clearly shows. Its author is a physician, and also has the virtue of being a technophiliac, but the best part of his writing is his frankness in assessing some of the issues in modern medicine. Treatment modalities,... more info
- He's great -- heard him on the radio

I heard this guy on Terry Gross & Marty Moss-Coane. He was awesome. They don't make doctors like that anymore. At least I can't find them. I got a copy of the book from my husband and read it straight through. If you are interested in how technology is shaping the technical and human side of medicine, you will love this book. It's not often you run across someone who can relate Hypocrates to telemedicine.
- this guy must be a genius

A discussion for the layman about the cutting edge of medical technologies and their various future ramifications; the last chapter focuses on the most elemental technological tool - the human hand (actually the author's father's hand who was also a doctor), which puts the conflict of the entire profession of health care in a humane and sympathetic historical perspective
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