Mr. Morris is given an extraordinary opportunity to witness heart surgery in Columbia Presbyterian Med Center. He not only observes high risks heart transplants or both adult and peds, but he also gets to "learn" from the gifted, steady & stalwart hands of doctors Craig Smith, Mehmet Oz, Jan Quaegebeur, & their team of "super-fellow" MDs, anesthesiologists, perfusionists, PAs, OR nurses & cardiac nurses. The book is not only gives a brief glimpse into the mastery of cardiothoracic surgery, but includes very real consequences its failures- return surgeries in already high risk patients, the double heartbreak of unsuccessful transplant in a peds case, for examples. Mr. Morris also gives us insight into where the specialty is moving - cardiac radio-intervention/surgeon is the product of the cardiac and radiology specialty: minimally invasive cardiac procedures to open arterial blockages vs open chest or "on pump" CABGs.
Morris also discusses the shortcomings despite all the technical & medical wizardry. Its is a risky surgery with high mortality, hence the weekly Mortality & Morbidity (M&M) conferences. The specialty also relies research on while it comes under the fire of the very research which questions known established practice (ie studies of approtinin use in surgery).
Finally, Morris also addresses familiar issues of money & health care policy, practice standardization, & the medical industrial complex & its myriad payers & players; and brief paragraphs on medicare/medicare. The book was published in 2008, but leaves us with the heaviest, & most haunting question in everyone's mind - can we do better?