No Apparent Distress: A Doctor's Coming of Age on the Front Lines of American Medicine
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No Apparent Distress: A Doctor's Coming of Age on the Front Lines of American Medicine
<p><strong>A brutally frank memoir about doctors and patients in a health care system that puts the poor at risk.</strong></p><br /><em>No Apparent Distress</em> begins with a mistake made by a white medical student that may have hastened the death of a working-class black man who sought care in a student-run clinic. Haunted by this error, the author—herself from a working-class background—delves into the stories and politics of a medical training system in which students learn on the bodies of the poor. Part confession, part family history, <em>No Apparent Distress</em> is at once an indictment of American health care and a deeply moving tale of one doctor’s coming-of-age.