Atul Gawande Character Analysis

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"Every man's life ends the same way. It is only the details of how he lived and how he died that distinguish one man from another,” says Ernest Hemingway. Death has been a hotly debated topic since the start of the human race. Questions like why do we die and how do we stop dying has been gradually answered as our medical technology like antibiotics are invented, but questions like what is the purpose of life if we were to die and how to ease a patient’s suffering just seems to become more complex as our civilization advances. In 2014, Atul Gawande, a renowned doctor, provides some interesting insights into disease, end of life care, and a patient’s suffering. Through his interesting personal stories and powerful statistics, Gawande shows us how medicine fails to treat patients with terminal disease in the right way and reveals some deep philosophical ideas about mortality and suffering. Gawande starts the book with “I learned about a lot of things in medical school, but mortality wasn’t one of them” (1). As a doctor who has gone through the process of medical school, Gawande knows how medical students are taught the advanced technological knowledge about the disease while forgetting the human side of medicine and disease. Mortality is a state of being subject to …show more content…

His father believes that keeping him in the company is preventing him from typing, emailing and skyping. These things that he has been doing all his life are suddenly changed by the treatment rather than death or disease. This alters of course of life brings patient mental suffering, even more, painful than what the disease or death causes. Awful cancer still “leaves a narrow space of possibility for room to live”, to live like he wants and our modern medical treatment, especially end-of-life care, just eliminates that narrow space (229). Thus, it brings patient more suffering, rather than easing

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