116. Abraham Verghese Thinks Medicine Can Do Better
Oct 14, 2023•49 min•Ep 116•Transcript available on Metacast Episode description
Abraham Verghese is a physician and a best-selling author — in that order, he says. He explains the difference between curing and healing, and tells Steve why doctors should spend more time with patients and less with electronic health records.
RESOURCES:
- The Covenant of Water, by Abraham Verghese (2023).
- "Abraham Verghese’s Sweeping New Fable of Family and Medicine,” by Andrew Solomon (The New York Times, 2023).
- “Watch Oprah’s Emotional Conversation with Abraham Verghese, Author of the 101st Oprah’s Book Club Pick” (Oprah Daily, 2023).
- "How Indian Teachers Have Shaped Ethiopia's Education System," by Mariam Jafri (The Quint, 2023).
- “How Tech Can Turn Doctors Into Clerical Workers,” by Abraham Verghese (The New York Times Magazine, 2018).
- Cutting for Stone, by Abraham Verghese (2009).
- "Culture Shock — Patient as Icon, Icon as Patient," by Abraham Verghese (The New England Journal of Medicine, 2008).
- “The Cowpath to America,” by Abraham Verghese (The New Yorker, 1997).
- My Own Country: A Doctor's Story, by Abraham Verghese (1994).
- "Urbs in Rure: Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection in Rural Tennessee," by Abraham Verghese, Steven L. Berk, and Felix Sarubbi (The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1989).
EXTRAS:
SOURCES:
- Abraham Verghese, professor of medicine at Stanford University and best-selling novelist.