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I visited bookstores in my professional and personal travels across the country with a simple question to the booksellers: "What book would you recommend to someone diagnosed with an incurable, but not fatal, illness?" The frequent response was a perplexed look, sometimes accompanied by scratching the head or chin. At best, they directed me to books focused on living a healthy lifestyle-often through a diet plan of unproven value. A few pointed to books focused on a very specific disease. These invariably dealt with an unconventional and poorly supported approach to treatment. But the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
I visited bookstores in my professional and personal travels across the country with a simple question to the booksellers: "What book would you recommend to someone diagnosed with an incurable, but not fatal, illness?" The frequent response was a perplexed look, sometimes accompanied by scratching the head or chin. At best, they directed me to books focused on living a healthy lifestyle-often through a diet plan of unproven value. A few pointed to books focused on a very specific disease. These invariably dealt with an unconventional and poorly supported approach to treatment. But the booksellers with whom I visited were at a loss for a book addressing the many issues faced by those of us living with incurable ailments leading to many years of an altered lifestyle: How do we get physicians to take our health complaints seriously? Where do we turn when doctors acknowledge our ailment with upturned hands and confess they don't know how to help? How do we deal with the overwhelming sense of loss with an untreatable diagnosis-one sure to produce profound changes in our life? How do we address those whose reaction to our ailment increases our suffering? Can we live well with inescapable pain? How do we avoid living in a state of fear when facing an uncertain prognosis? Should we try to keep our disease a secret from others? How do we choose between treatment options when each could cause harm? How do we tell if new symptoms are from our chronic disease or signs of some new ailment? How do we live with regret when an ailment is a result of choices we made? How can those who love us help? As a pharmacist and biomedical scientist living with several incurable ailments, I understand the travails patients with chronic illness face. I wrote to help patients and those who care for them find answers to these important questions. When There Is No Cure provides encouragement and hope to those navigating the troubled waters of chronic illness.
Autorenporträt
Craig K. Svensson, PharmD, PhD is Dean Emeritus and Professor of Medicinal Chemistry & Molecular Pharmacology in the Purdue University College of Pharmacy, as well as Adjunct Professor of Pharmacology & Toxicology in the Indiana University School of Medicine. He is an elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists, and was selected as a 175th Anniversary Distinguished Alumnus of the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy. His research has been supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and he has served as a consultant to both the NIH and the National Science Foundation.