From Publishers Weekly
Schneider, a climate scientist at Stanford and a MacArthur fellow, brought skills rooted in the uncertainty of his own field to bear on the treatments he received for mantle cell lymphoma, a rare condition for which treatments were relatively new. With his wife, Terry, also a scientist, he learned as much as possible about the protocol he had been assigned and read up on his oncologist, a leader in this type of cancer, Dr. Sandra Horning. Schneider gives a detailed account of the painful and otherwise unpleasant side effects of the chemotherapy, radiation and bone-marrow transplant he endured in a determined effort to arrest the disease. From the beginning, the author researched probabilities and outcomes and sought to modify decisions made by his physicians. Most importantly, after some resistance, Dr. Horning agreed to use Rituxan for Schneider as maintenance therapy to prolong his remission. Although the author's scientific language can be daunting, patients will relate to his arguments for the importance of patient advocates, individualization of treatments and the negative role bottom-line accounting plays in medical judgments made by HMOs.
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Review
"An emotional account of the pain and fear [Schneider] felt while he was ill." --
MacLean's, 01/09/06"Compelling...offers a number of positive and useful messages for patients enduring chemotherapy, radiation, and other cancer treatment." --
Journal of the American Medical Association, 01/11/06"Offer[s] up distinct and fascinating explorations of the connections between the personal, the public, and the medical." --
Body+Soul December 2005"Schneider's narrative is lively and engaging...informative but personal." --
Raleigh News & Observer, 12/18/05