This book traces memoirs of a family doctor who shunned the notion of becoming a physician as he observed his family doctor father while growing up. To spend so many years in school-only to have meals, sleep, and vacations interrupted by needy patients-offered no allure. Not until his third year of college did he make the career choice, and his tale traverses his experiences from college, medical school, internship, U.S. Navy, to practicing in Colorado. His story includes abundant patient anecdotes, plus his take on racism, medical malpractice, and health reform. Dr. Wolf's humanism is evident throughout, and is evidenced by the fact that the royalties from his book will go to a Boulder County low-income clinic he helped found in 1977.



Autorentext

Dr. Howie Wolf grew up in a small Iowa town, where his father was the only doctor. After graduating from the University of Iowa College of Medicine, he interned at the University of Texas Medical Branch Hospital in Galveston, TX, and then served two years in the US Navy. "Howie" then practiced more than 53 years in Colorado and is now retired, living in Boulder with his wife.



Inhalt

Foreword
Prologue
Early Years
Education: College & Medical School
Internship
United States Navy
Private Practice Begins in Longmont
Lafayette Practice
Teaching
Clinica Campesina
Activities
Examining an Old Adage: Doctors Should Avoid Lawyers
Final Chapter

Titel
I Really Didn't Want to Become a Doctor
Untertitel
Tales and Musings from a Family Doc Retired After 50-Plus Years
EAN
9780761869634
Format
E-Book (epub)
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Anzahl Seiten
88