Dr. Sheri Fink ist eine investigative Journalistin, die sich mit komplexen ethischen Dilemmata in Krisenzeiten befasst. Sie berichtet über schwierige Entscheidungen, die Menschen unter extremen Bedingungen treffen müssen, insbesondere im Gesundheitswesen. Ihre Reportagen beleuchten oft die Spannung zwischen Pflicht und begrenzten Ressourcen, untersuchen menschliche Reaktionen auf Katastrophen und bieten tiefe Einblicke in die moralischen Komplikationen des Überlebenskampfes. Fink nutzt ihre umfassende Erfahrung als Helferin in Krisengebieten, um packende und detaillierte Erzählungen zu schaffen, die zum Nachdenken anregen.
In the tradition of the best writing on human behaviour and moral choices in the face of disaster, physician and reporter Sheri Fink reconstructs five days at New Orleans' Memorial Medical Center during Hurricane Katrina and draws the reader into the lives of those who struggled mightily to survive and to maintain life amidst chaos.
Pulitzer Prize-winner Sheri Fink's landmark work of narrative nonfiction re-creates the world of a New Orleans hospital ravaged by post-Katrina floodwaters and examines the central question of what doctors and other caregivers owe their patients in the best, and worst, of circumstances. Physician and reporter Sheri Fink reconstructs five days at Memorial Medical Center and draws the reader into the lives of the doctors and nurses who struggled to preserve life amidst chaos. After Katrina destroyed the generators that make twenty-first century medicine possible, to be a patient at Memorial meant you were wholly at the mercy of caregivers forced to make a cascade of decisions about whose lives could be preserved and who would most likely die in the face of serious illness and limited medical care. The result was an almost unthinkable tragedy: several health professionals deliberately injected severely ill patients with drugs to hasten their deaths. In an engrossing narrative that exposes the human drama that fuels medicine and the unchartered territory of end-of-life care, Fink brings the reader into a hospital fighting for its life and into a conversation about just how ill-prepared we are as Americans for the impact of large-scale disasters on the most vulnerable among us.
Skutečný příběh o chirurgii a boji o život.
V dubnu 1992 hrstka mladých lékařů, z nichž ani jeden nebyl chirurgem, zůstala uvězněna spolu s 50 000 muži, ženami a dětmi v obklíčené enklávě kolem města Srebrenica, na území Bosny a Hercegoviny. Ve Srebrenici, městě, jehož tragický osud je stále aktuální, tito lékaři čelili nejintenzivnějšímu porofesnímu, etickému a osobnímu vypětí ve svých životech.
Přeložil Petr Tůma.