Expensive. Broken. Americans use these two words more than any others to describe—and condemn—their own health-care system. And they’re right. Could one local hospital—a David among the Goliaths of the Texas Medical Center—serve as a model for the change Americans have longed for?
In the richest country on earth, the high cost of health care drains pockets and leaves millions without access to lifesaving treatments, crowding emergency rooms and ultimately leading to greater expenses for all. How to change a system so mired in politics and corporatism, however, remains elusive. What Americans don’t know is that a humane and cost-effective health-care system already exists in Houston, Texas.
In The People’s Hospital, Dr. Ricardo Nuila takes us inside the Harris Health System and Ben Taub Hospital, where he has practiced medicine for more than a decade. He shares the experiences of five of his patients, braiding their dramas into a singular narrative that tears down the notion that good health care in America is only available to the well insured.
Despite the massive challenges, Ben Taub, a publicly funded hospital, provides affordable, accessible health care for pennies on the dollar. Nuila shows us how—and makes clear the enormous impact this kind of health care has on individual patients’ lives and on the health of a community.
As listeners follow the many twists and turns, all told with a novelist’s flair, on the health-care journeys of Roxana, Geronimo, Christian, Stephen, and Ebonie, it’s impossible to deny that the system is broken—and that Ben Taub’s innovative model, which emphasizes people over payments, could help light the path forward.
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“[The] case studies are poignant reflections on the life of a doctor and incisive analyses of how for-profit medicine hurts patients. This is an urgent and essential call for a more humane health-care system.”
— Publishers Weekly
“In the author’s hands, Ben Taub Hospital becomes a beacon of light…A compassionate, engrossing story of frustrated hopes and unlikely victories in American health care.”
— Kirkus Reviews (starred review)“Offers readers a glimpse of what is possible when American health care recommits itself to the bygone promise of protecting our most vulnerable.”
— Francisco Cantú, author of The Line Becomes a RiverBe the first to write a review about this audiobook!
Dr. Ricardo Nuila is a writer, teacher, and practicing doctor. He is an associate professor of medicine, medical ethics, and health policy at Baylor College of Medicine, where he directs the Humanities Expression and Arts Lab [HEAL] program.