Five Patients: The Hospital Explained by Michael Crichton
Author:Michael Crichton
Language: eng
Format: mobi
Tags: Non-Fiction, Thriller, Science
ISBN: 9780613215466
Publisher: Rebound by Sagebrush
Published: 1970-06-01T05:00:00+00:00
* * *
What is the hospital’s responsibility? Originally, the answer was quite clear—it was
built to care for any needy person in Boston who had the initiative to seek it out. With
the passage of time, its community became not the entire city, but a part of it, the so-
called North End. This is a community of working-class Italians and Irishmen, with
areas of considerable poverty.
But the hospital has never lost its passivity, a tradition that can be traced all the way
back to Greece. Patients are expected to come to the hospital, and not the reverse. And
while the hospital will never turn anyone away from its doors, neither will it actively
seek out illness in the community. Furthermore, the impact of technology over the last
twenty years has been to make the hospital even more passive, as it becomes more
preoccupied with acute established disease, to the almost total neglect of preventive
medicine.
But the role of the hospital is going to change, as public expectations for medical
care change. According to Alexander Leaf, Chief of Medicine, “For a long time—since
Hippocrates—we have not attached any broader social obligation to the physician’s
education. You went through your training program whether in school or as an
apprentice, and then you hung out your shingle and treated whoever could pay you. But
now that is unacceptable to society, which is making other demands from physicians.”
He says, further: “I think we have to restructure the functions of the hospital if it is to survive for the next twenty years.”
Implicit in this is the notion that what the hospital now does, it does well. But it is
not doing enough, and the times, indeed, are changing. To quote Galbraith, “One must
either anticipate change or be its victim.”
The hospital can no longer be a charitable refuge for the poor patients—the poor
patient (or, rather, the patient whose bills can’t be paid) is disappearing from the
landscape.
The hospital can no longer act as a stronghold of technological, scientific excellence
for a few patients, when the disparity between in-patient marvels and community
horrors is ever-increasing.
Dr. John Knowles, director of the hospital, observes that “When I was recently the
visit on the medical service, the first five patients presented to me all happened, by a
curious coincidence, to have the same problem. And it serves to point up the
incongruity of what we’re doing here. All five were elderly, chronic alcoholics with
massive GI bleeding and end-stage liver disease. All five were in coma and we were
treating them vigorously, with everything medicine has to offer. They had intravenous
lines, and central venous pressure catheters, and tracheostomies, and positive pressure
respirators, and suction and Seng stocking tubes, and all the rest. They had house staff
and students and nurses working on them around the clock. They had consultants of
every shape and sort. They were running up bills of five hundred dollars a day, week
after week… . Certainly I think they should be treated, just as I think that a large
hospital like this is the place where this brand of complex medicine ought to be carried
out. But you can’t help reflecting, as you look at
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