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Americans are suffering from chronic disease, and our healthcare system can't save us. Sometimes it makes us worse. In fact, we don't have a healthcare system in this country-we have a four-trillion-dollar sickcare system that profits off people struggling with chronic disease. Primary care doctors are responsible for keeping us healthy, but our primary care system is broken. Worse, the policies and science that led to great medical advances in the past are insufficient to help in the future. Nothing seems to be working. But a paradigm shift is underway that is about to change everything. In…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Americans are suffering from chronic disease, and our healthcare system can't save us. Sometimes it makes us worse. In fact, we don't have a healthcare system in this country-we have a four-trillion-dollar sickcare system that profits off people struggling with chronic disease. Primary care doctors are responsible for keeping us healthy, but our primary care system is broken. Worse, the policies and science that led to great medical advances in the past are insufficient to help in the future. Nothing seems to be working. But a paradigm shift is underway that is about to change everything. In Dying to Save You, Dr. William Queale takes you behind the scenes of our sickcare system. He uses deeply personal stories to explain how we got here and how systems thinking can get us out. But Dying to Save You isn't just about medicine, science, and healthcare policy. This book is about you-and how you can stay out of the sickcare system altogether.
Autorenporträt
Dr. William Queale is a board-certified internal medicine physician with training in physical therapy, exercise science, and clinical epidemiology. As a healthcare advisor, Dr. Queale has helped organizations develop compliance and quality improvement programs, employee health centers, and community health programs. He is a former chairman of the Board Compliance, Quality, and Safety Committee at Ashley Addiction Treatment and is currently an assistant professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. With more than twenty years in private practice as a primary care physician, Dr. Queale is interested in developing and scaling a new primary care model.