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Never Get Sick on the First of July includes more than 100 of the most human, outrageous, memorable, and, yes, weirdest and funniest incidents of Doctor Miller’s medical training at Chicago’s Cook County Hospital, where he earned the Intern of the Year Award. While each is a story unto itself, the episodes trace his development as a physician and are woven together by his underlying philosophy emphasizing a personalized, and empathetic approach to patient care.
The stories are enriched by illustrating his thought processes and reveal tightly held secrets that until now only medical insiders knew. Readers will not only be entertained by the situation, but will also gain a rare understanding of the dynamics that give emergency medicine such powerful appeal.
Readers will learn how a mysterious headache was caused by a nail some friends had pounded into the victim’s head, and find out how a patient got lost for three months on a surgical ward. Every story is a grabber; every one is true.
With the tremendous popularity of the television series ER (which took place at Cook County Hospital), you will be surprised to know what it was really like inside the nation’s favorite emergency room. Doctor Miller’s book illustrates what everyone should know before going to any ER, especially on the first of July.
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Never Get Sick on the First of July includes more than 100 of the most human, outrageous, memorable, and, yes, weirdest and funniest incidents of Doctor Miller’s medical training at Chicago’s Cook County Hospital, where he earned the Intern of the Year Award. While each is a story unto itself, the episodes trace his development as a physician and are woven together by his underlying philosophy emphasizing a personalized, and empathetic approach to patient care.
The stories are enriched by illustrating his thought processes and reveal tightly held secrets that until now only medical insiders knew. Readers will not only be entertained by the situation, but will also gain a rare understanding of the dynamics that give emergency medicine such powerful appeal.
Readers will learn how a mysterious headache was caused by a nail some friends had pounded into the victim’s head, and find out how a patient got lost for three months on a surgical ward. Every story is a grabber; every one is true.
With the tremendous popularity of the television series ER (which took place at Cook County Hospital), you will be surprised to know what it was really like inside the nation’s favorite emergency room. Doctor Miller’s book illustrates what everyone should know before going to any ER, especially on the first of July.