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“Surgery is the most masculine of medical disciplines, taking knives and penetrating the body to find disease and destroy it. It is a war game in which cold and shiny stainless steel is pitted against the unseen, sinister but discoverable and conquerable enemy. Pediatrics is in many ways the most feminine of medical disciplines, with its focus on small children, preventive care, nurturing. In terms of gender, neonatology seems to be somewhere in between.”
John D. Lantos, The Lazarus Case: Life-and-Death Issues in Neonatal Intensive Care
“Many NICU survivors have hospital bills of more than a million dollars and cannot be discharged from the hospital because their parents cannot afford a telephone at home.”
John D. Lantos, The Lazarus Case: Life-and-Death Issues in Neonatal Intensive Care
“there is something unforgettably compelling about having actually been there, alone, at two in the morning, gloved, masked, and robed like a latex-covered priest, receiving into my hands a blue, bloody, and lifeless baby and having to decide.”
John D. Lantos, The Lazarus Case: Life-and-Death Issues in Neonatal Intensive Care
“From the individual doctor’s perspective, it is far better to do whatever it takes to avoid litigation, even if it doesn’t seem to be the right thing to do, than to risk entanglement in this crazy system.”
John D. Lantos, The Lazarus Case: Life-and-Death Issues in Neonatal Intensive Care
“Informed consent is probably the most revolutionary, the most rudimentary, the most misunderstood and misused term in all of health law and bioethics.”
John D. Lantos, The Lazarus Case: Life-and-Death Issues in Neonatal Intensive Care
“A whole hospital ward seemed to be crossdressing, nurses pretending to be mothers playing like boys with Tinkertoy babies.”
John D. Lantos, The Lazarus Case: Life-and-Death Issues in Neonatal Intensive Care
“Because the work that doctors do has moral urgency, doctors have a highly refined, professionally reinforced sense of right and wrong.”
John D. Lantos, The Lazarus Case: Life-and-Death Issues in Neonatal Intensive Care

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The Lazarus Case: Life-and-Death Issues in Neonatal Intensive Care (Medicine and Culture) The Lazarus Case
54 ratings
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Neonatal Bioethics: The Moral Challenges of Medical Innovation Neonatal Bioethics
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Do We Still Need Doctors? (Reflective Bioethics) Do We Still Need Doctors?
8 ratings
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