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About the Author

Frank T. Vertosick, Jr., M.D., is a neurosurgeon A former president of the Pennsylvania Neurosurgical Society and a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, he lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Works by Frank T. Vertosick Jr.

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Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Vertosick Jr., Frank T.
Birthdate
1954
Gender
male
Education
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine (M.D., 1981)
University of Pittsburgh (BA, 1976)
Occupations
neurosurgeon
author
Organizations
Pennsylvania Neurosurgical Society (president)
American College of Surgeons (fellow)
Short biography
Dr. Frank Vertosick Jr., retired from surgery due to Parkinson's disease in 2002, but still treats office patients in Washington, Pennsylvania.
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

13 reviews
I’ve read several of these “doctor tells all” books, and this was unusual in that almost all of it was about Frank Vertosick’s actual career as a neurosurgeon. Several of his stories, which he tells the reader in the preface are composites rather than verbatim recountings of actual patient experiences, are really interesting, and one pulls at the heartstrings. Vertosick loses a patient on the operating table because of a mistake he made. His colleagues seemed very blasé about the show more mistake and brush it off as simply the cost of doing brain surgery. Vertosick almost changes careers because he is so despondent over it. Vertosick is obviously dedicated to his profession, which (spoiler alert) he eventually has to give up because of a physical impairment of his own. I highly recommend “When the Air Hits Your Brain” for both its entertainment value and its educational lessons. show less
This is a fascinating and emotionally frank collection of stories taken from the author's professional life, from the humble beginnings of a Neurosurgery resident to the humbling culmination of a Neurosurgeon. I especially appreciate how he doesn't avoid those cases that had a less than great ending and that he recognizes how much you can learn from failure. Anyone with an interest in Neurosurgery should read this, not only because of Vertosick's talent as a story-teller, but because of his show more honesty when it comes to patients, his sense of humor regarding this very serious topic, and his seemingly unending passion for that lump in our head which is the brain. show less
This was an engaging memoir of the medical school and training experiences, from internship to fellowships, of the author on his journey to become a neurosurgeon. It includes some fascinating case histories, but mostly focuses on the author's evolving relationship with and attitude towards his patients.

When he began training, he would find himself emotionally touched by his patients. Then, "Trauma experiences hardened me to death and pain patients made me cynical about suffering. I felt my show more personality shifting away during this arduous process of becoming 'one of them.' Clinical cases no longer evoked the strong emotions they once had."
*****************

"Yet my emotional numbness was still only partial. I still hadn't progressed to the status of true surgical psychopath, wherein one's humanity is placed under general anesthesia."

He also discusses the mistakes made and the effect they had on him in his training. At a certain point, as he became more skilled, he learned he had to guard against overconfidence:

"Before reaching my surgical adulthood, I would again stumble into the inferno of overconfidence. And come perilously close to emotional incineration."

Ultimately (thankfully), the author came to the conclusion that "surgical psychopathy" was not the best way to handle the difficulties of his profession. He learned that some caring is a necessary element to be a good surgeon.

I enjoyed this book, focusing as it does on the emotional development of a surgeon. I recommend it if this sounds interesting to you.

3 1/2 stars
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½
Dr. Vertosick provides a very lively and personal account of his neurosurgery career. He has a very good sense of humour, while trying to correct some TV-induced wrong assumptions about the medical field he doesn't hesitate to talk about how he received some little but critical help from a patient who watched some medical TV series :)

He describes his transition from being a very young student of medicine, to becoming an assistant at the world's best neurosurgery department, and finally to show more becoming an expert neurosurgeon under the supervision of another very disciplined and famous expert doctor. While doing that he helps the reader see the intricacies and beauty of that small, fatty, bloody tissue which makes us what we are: the brain.

After all the difficult cases he describes I truly believe that one has to be really crazy to become a neurosurgeon and operate on brain, or really love that field of study (maybe both). Dr. Vertosick made me realize once again what a miraculous thing that brain of ours is.

As a book of popular science I can compare the quality and smoothness of narration to one of my favorite authors, Oliver Sacks.

PS: It was nice to see the name of a Turkish neurosurgeon Prof. Dr. Gazi Yaşargil in the book, too.
show less
½

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Statistics

Works
10
Members
619
Popularity
#40,645
Rating
4.1
Reviews
13
ISBNs
16
Languages
2

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