
The Masters of Medicine
Our Greatest Triumphs in the Race to Cure Humanity's Deadliest Diseases
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Narrado por:
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Jason Vu
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De:
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Andrew Lam
Human history hinges on the battle to confront our most dangerous enemies—the half-dozen diseases responsible for killing almost all of mankind. The story of our medical triumphs reveals an inspiring tapestry of human achievement, but the journey was far from smooth. It is a tale replete with dramatic episodes as spellbinding as any blockbuster Hollywood movie.
In The Masters of Medicine, Dr. Andrew Lam, an award-winning author and retinal surgeon, distills the long arc of medical progress down to the crucial moments that were responsible for the world's greatest medical miracles. He brings to life heroic tales of embattled mavericks who endured ridicule and sometimes risked their own lives to conceive the life-saving cures we depend on, and often take for granted, today.
Listeners will discover fascinating true stories throughout history, including: rival surgeons who killed patient after patient in their race to operate on beating hearts—and put us on the path toward the life-saving heart transplant; a quartet of Canadians who miraculously discovered insulin in a saga marred by jealousy and resentment; the feud between two Americans in the quest for the polio vaccine; and the discredited New York surgeon whose "heretical" idea to cure patients by deliberately infecting them has now inspired our next best hope to defeat cancer.
©2023 Andrew Lam (P)2023 HighBridge, a division of Recorded BooksListeners also enjoyed...




















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The producer(s) fell asleep at the wheel, listening to the reading. Please review with Jason Vu the pronunciation of medical words, as well as other less commonly used words, before the final production of future works. Most of his not infrequent mispronunciations were annoying. A few gave pause, to decipher.
Medical history comes to life
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Most importantly, this book addressed inequalities in the field of science and medicine. As well as what we need to do as a society to move forward.
An absolute must listen!!
Excellent listen and read!
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omg medicine basically didn't exist till 1931
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descriptive process of how medicines were discovered
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Need a new narrator
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Interesting historical perspective on multiple fields of medicine.
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Incredible insight into the pioneers of medicine
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great book, odd choice in narrator
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Brilliant
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To deepen the problems with this audiobook, the narrator reads as if he's in a race to the finish, with little or no attention to commas, periods, paragraphs, or pronunciations. On pronunciations, I mean, "prednistone"? That one gave me a laugh, anyway. But his mispronunciations of other ordinary medical terms is difficult to understand. Catheterization came out multiple times as cathARTerization, as if Vu though the word directly parallel to catharsis.
If some other publisher took up this text and republished an audiobook edited and recorded well, I'd buy it again and start over. Audiobooks have become an art, and Andrew Lam's research deserves better. So do we readers.
Who produced this clunker?
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