Arts Entertain The Arts Of Medicine Cireek and American Cuisine OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK The Changing World Of Medicine 154 S. Woodward, Birmingham (248) 540-8780 In his newest book, Dr. Jerome Groopman offers sage medical advice to patients facing the maze of medical care in the 21st century. Halsted Village (37580 W. 12 Mile Rd.) Farmington Hills (248) 553-2360 6527 Telegraph Rd. Corner of Maple (15 Mile) Bloomfield Township (248) 646-8568 DIANE COLE Special to the Jewish News IV ho among us hasn't wished on a particularly callous or arrogant doc- tor a bitter taste of his own uncaring medicine? Instead of feel- ing guiltily vindictive, breathe a healthy sigh of relief. There really are doctors who, as a result of their own bouts with serious illness, feel exactly the same way. Listen, for instance, to Jerome Groopman, M.D., for whom a patient/doctor role reversal made an immeasurable impact on the way he practices medicine. "My first experience as a patient proved as instructive as all my classes in medical school," he candidly con- fesses at the start of Second Opinions: 4763 Haggerty Rd. at Pontiac Trail West Wind Village Shopping Center West Bloomfield (248) 669-2295 841 East Big Beaver, Troy (248) 680-0094 SOUTHFIELD SOUVLAKI CONEY ISLAND Nine Mile & Greenfield 15647 West Nine Mile, Southfield (248) 569-5229 FARMINGTON SOUVLAKI CONEY ISLAND Between 13 & 14 on Orchard Lake Road 30985 Orchard Lake Rd. Farmington Hills (248) 626-9732 NEW LOCATION: 525 N. Main Milford (248) 684-1772 UPTOWN PARTHENON 4301 Orchard Lake Rd. West Bloomfield (248) 538-6000 HERCULES FAMILY RESTAURANT 33292 West 12 Mile Farmington Hills (248) 489-9777 Serving whitefish, lamb shank, pastitsio and moussaka 1 ,.......................7 I 1 1 1 Receive 0° / Bill 1 Entire 1 1 0 Off 1 1 1 1 I I I not to go with any other offer 1 10/6 2000 82 i I with coupon Expires 12/30/2000 Meg ME OH MINI UM MC NISI MEM WM I I I Stories of Intuition and Choice in the Changing World of Medicine (Viking: $24.95). The book is an insightful examination of the shifting relations between doctors and patients. Twenty years ago, he relates, compli- cations from dispiritingly unsuccessful back surgery endowed him with a lega- cy of chronic pain that will never let him forget — neither as he examines patients nor goes on hospital rounds — the sense of helplessness and some- times hopelessness felt by anyone who has ever lain immobile and unheard. For Groopman, a well-known oncologist, AIDS researcher and staff writer for The New Yorker, never far from the surface, either, are other searing memo- ries of his personal education in empathy. First came the agony of watching his father die of a massive heart attack; intensifying the grief was the terrible knowledge that better care might have saved him. But the community hospi- tal to which the ambulance driver unthinkingly rushed the patient pro- vided no cardiologist, no intensive care unit, only the most rudimentary care. As first-time parents, Groopman and his wife, Harvard-trained physi- cians both, experienced the same anxi- ety and powerlessness as any nonmed- ical expert as they raced their critically ill nine-month-old son to a jam- packed emergency room in the after- math of a pediatrician's potentially fatal misdiagnosis of their child's life- threatening condition. And that was only the beginning. Just like everyone else, their medical credentials notwithstanding, they had to battle against the lackadaisical response of a harried, first-year resi- dent who seemed more intent on sign- ing off duty than performing his med- ical duty. Only their persistent, active prodding resulted in the immediate surgery that saved their son's life. Each encounter left enduring scars, both physical and psychological. But viewing medicine from all different sides of the hospital bed — as patient, concerned family member and doctor — taught Groopman crucial lessons in compassion and care. In the deeply felt Second Opinions, as in his first book, The Measure of Our Days: A Spiritual Exploration of Illness (Penguin Book; $13.95), Groopman presents riveting case histories of patients suf- fering from a variety of can- cers and other diseases. They serve to dramatize how terribly awry modern medicine can go when cost- cutting, cookie-cutter approaches depersonalize rather than heal. Dr. Jerome Groopman: "There should be no ego involved in getting the best care." In one case, that cost-control "factory mentality" of managed care, as Groopman calls it, cost a woman's life. Because they fell outside the "clinical algorithm" at her HMO, her doctor never bothered to administer the chest X-ray and blood tests that would have shown the patient's "routine" symptoms of asthma were in fact caused by a fast- advancing form of leukemia. But private practitioners can cut corners, too, when money is on their mind, Groopman warns. When a wealthy patrician seeks a second opin- ion from Groopman, the doctors at the patient's community hospital try to retain him, despite their lack of expertise and inability to provide state- of-the-art care for his hairy cell leukemia — because they fear losing his large charitable contributions. Of course, we all want the best care. At the same time, the powerful new tech- nologies research has given us should not be administered by rote, Groopman cau- tions. Too often, the desire to act can overcome the knowledge that a particular therapy is unlikely to work. Sometimes, the best course of action proves the least sexy. As one of Groopman's mentors put it: "Don't just do something — stand there!" In addition to his understanding that every patient's needs are distinct and individual, Groopman's greatest gift is his ability to cut through con- fusing medical mumbo-jumbo. Both doctors and patients can learn much from his basic points on the changing nature of medicine today: • Modern medicine often relies as much on intuition — and luck — as technol- ogy. We want to think of medicine as a science, with comforting data to back our decisions. But unpredictable outcomes, both good and bad, have taught Groopman that, "even with all the clinical information, medicine was not physics. The inherent vari- ability of human biology meant judg- ment could not be reduced to mathe- matical calculation." As an illustration of the subjectivity of medicine, Groopman and a highly regarded colleague view the very same data, but sharply disagree on both the diagnosis and the course of treatment. Both the doctors and the patient must learn to make therapy decisions based as much on clinical experience as trusting their gut." In another case, a patient's failure to be