Atul Gawande Complications Summary

546 Words2 Pages

In the book Complications, Atul writes about his experiences as a surgical residents and demonstrates a point of view of surgery that does not idealize it, but instead displays the actual pressure and complexity it actually is. Atul Gawande speaks to fellow surgeons, surgeons to be or simply those who believe that the study of surgery is just memorizing procedures, nonetheless it’s so much more complex due to the fact that every case that arrives is different. He is able to portray the complexity of surgery by putting his readers in heart racing situations faced by doctors, explaining step by step procedures, giving his personal stories of cases he has assisted in at the hospital as a resident. Atul Gawande appeals to his reader’s attitude …show more content…

At the end of the book the authors places a notes of source which include surgeries he’s observed or took part in, books he’s read about while trying to find answers to certain cases, and articles on clinical trials. He uses annotation the most through the book to explain his think or for clarity. While trying to prove that not all doctors are to be trust, he uses annotation to further explain himself. By stating “.. One doctor, who was sent to Neff after several episode of freezing in place in mid- operation, was found to have advanced parkinson's disease..” ( Pg. 101), Gawande addresses to the way of thinking to his reader in order to show that the pedestal surgery is up upon is not all what it entails to show. Essentially the use of annotations is meant to convince the intended audiences that surgery goes beyond what many think it is. Atul Gawande writes an outstanding book about surgery that displays the true color of surgery. By telling stories of all the flaws he saw and experiences in his own year as a surgical resident. Atul vividly demonstrates this by the use of annotations to show that he know what he is actually saying and to make the reader understand his thoughts as a resident. He also uses through the book repetition to make his readers have the same rush doctors feel while treating a patient. By doing this the reader is able to understand the difficulty of being a surgeon and the truth behind

Open Document