This made me very, very glad I no longer work in healthcare. Most doctors I worked with were great but this reminded me of the ones who weren’t.
I enjoyed Jauhar’s first book Intern back in the day and thought it was high time to try his next book. Unfortunately, it wasn’t what I was hoping for. I’m not sure who the intended audience was: other doctors? Insurance company providers? Certainly not patients??
Doctors deserve to have safe places where they can commiserate about the ups and downs of their field. In that sense, I commend Dr. Jauhar for his vulnerability here. At the same time, I can’t help but wonder what his colleagues and patients made of it. He didn’t seem to actually enjoy his work, even aside from the frustrating aspects that accompany any career. His greater focus is on how he can make more money, without recognizing he and his wife chose to live in a more expensive neighborhood in an expensive city and pay for private school for their kid, all while his wife wasn’t working. If you work at a city hospital, there are going to be trade offs, including a lower salary compared to private practice doctors (which he’s adamant about not wanting to do). He tries moonlighting for a doctor and giving talks for a pharmaceutical company, both of which are ethically dubious.
I did not know what to make of the complaining and entitlement—particularly when I think about how little I made as a medical social worker compared to my doctor colleagues—which took away from the very real issues he was raising in terms of redundant insurance requirements and how doctors over-order tests or take advantage of the system. I wish there had more of a focus on the latter and that he would have proposed some solutions. Not everything applies anymore given how long ago this was published but our healthcare system still has much farther to go.
Content notes: patient death, cancer, substance abuse (patient), alcoholism (patient), ableism, depression, discussion of suicide rates, mental illness stigma (author’s father), past physical abuse by author’s father, medical malpractice and fraud, author is a cardiologist specializing in Congestive Heart Failure, racism, Islamaphobia, Romani slur (quote from poem), homophobia and homophobic slur (by patient), insomnia, anti-fat bias, diet culture, classism, pregnancy after fertility issues (author’s wife), pregnancy complications and C-section (author’s wife), animal experimentation and death, past death of author’s grandfathers (heart attack), author’s family immigrated from India to the US when he was 8, alcohol, inebriation, recreational drug use, gendered pejorative, gender essentialism, ableist language, compares US healthcare to a “gang bang”