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Leading roles : 50 questions every arts board should ask / by Kaiser, Michael M.,1953-(CARDINAL)408544;
1. How Does a Successful Arts Organization Function? -- 2. How Does an Arts Organization Evolve? -- 3. Has Our Board Matured with Our Organization? -- 4. Why Do We Need a Mission Statement? What Constitutes a Good Mission Statement? -- 5. How Should We Develop a Mission Statement? -- 6.Do Our Board Meetings Reflect Our Mission? -- 7. What Are the Major Responsibilities of the Board? -- 8. How Many People Should Serve on Our Board? -- 9. What Are the Best Leadership Structures? What Kind of Board Leadership Do We Need? -- 10.Do We Need Board or Staff Diversity? -- 11. Do We Need Board Members with Specific Skills? Should We Have Other Not-for-Profit Executives on Our Board? -- 12. Where Do We Find New Board Members? How Should New Members Be Added? -- 13. Should We Have a "Give-or-Get" Policy? -- 14. Do We Need Term Limits? -- 15. What is the Function of a Governance Committee or Nominating Committee? -- 16. How Do We Fire Unproductive Board Members? -- 17. Apart from a Governance Committee, What Other Committees Do We Need? -- 18. Should the Artistic Director and Executive Director Serve on the Board? -- 19. Are We Relying Too Heavily on Contributed Revenue? -- 20. How Do We Attract Corporate Contributions? Foundation Contributions? Individual Contributions? -- 21. How Do We Maximize the Results of Our Annual Gala? -- 22.How Do We Evaluate a Fundraising Plan? -- 23. Are Board Members Responsible for Fundraising? How Do We Get Board Members to Raise Money? -- 24. Are We Embarrassed about Our Organization? -- 25. Are We Ready to Mount a Capital Campaign? How Do We Pursue This Campaign? -- 26. How Do We Evaluate a Marketing Plan? -- 27.How Do We Get a Diverse Audience? A Younger Audience? -- 28. Are Our Ticket Prices Appropriate? -- 29. Why Are Subscription Sales So Much Lower Than in the Past? -- 30. Are We Using the Internet Properly? -- 31. Our Theater Is Empty, What Should We Do? -- 32. Our Theater Is Filled, What Should We Do? -- 33. What Should We Think about When We Hire an Artistic Director or an Executive Director? -- 34. Should We Hire from the For-Profit Sector? -- 35. Is It Appropriate for Board Members to Do the Work of the Staff If They Are Not Doing It Well? -- 36. How Should the Artistic Director and the Executive Director Relate to Each Other? -- 37. How Should We Approach a Strategic Planning Process? How Can We Make Sure the Plan Is Implemented? -- 38. Do We Really Believe the Budget We Just Passed? Where Should We Cut If We Need To? -- 39. Should We Build a New Facility? -- 40. What Are the Major Pitfalls of Planning We Should Avoid? -- 41. Our Organization Is in a Crisis, What Do We Do? -- 42. Our Organization Is Not in the United States, Does That Make a Difference? -- 43. Our Organization Is an Institution of Color, Does That Make a Difference? -- 44. Should We Have a Subsidiary Board? A Volunteer Group? -- 45. Aren't All Artists Spendthrifts? -- 46. What Is the Board's Role in Artistic Planning? -- 47. How Many Years Out Should We Be Planning Our Art? -- 48. Should We Form Joint Ventures? -- 49. Should We Build a Touring Program? -- 50. Do We Need an Education Program?."[Kaiser] deliberately brings an outward calm into a situation where things are falling apart."ùWashington Post --"Kaiser is something of a rescue artist."ùTime --"Kaiser is the closest thing to a rock star on the nonprofit scene."ùDaily Variety --"Michael Kaiser blushes when you ask if he's a savior. But the president of the Kennedy Center is a missionary for the arts."ùMorning Edition, National Public Radio --"Michael Kaiser has made it his mission to help arts organizations around the world succeed. He is an ambassador and trusted authority for arts administrators everywhere, generously sharing his proven expertise that I've seen firsthand. Michael's book will take his life's work one step further, elevating the world of arts management with his wisdom."-Judith Jamison, Artistic Director, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater --"Michael Kaiser is very competent and far-sighted in dealing with the extremely complicated economic and organizational aspects of performing arts institutions, especially in this period of grave crises. In my capacity as General Director of Washington National Opera, which makes its home at the Kennedy Center, I have worked with Michael, the Center's President, and I share his approach to running not-for-profit arts organizations. I recommend his book to anyone who works in this area."ùPlßcido Domingo --"No one knows more about arts administration than Michael Kaiser. No wonder people the world over clamor for his attention and keen advice. The Kennedy Center's not-so-secret weapon is an international treasure. The book is a goldmine."ùTerrence Mcnally, playwright --A concise, practical and timely guide for board members of arts organizations --Drawing on these and many other conversations, nationally and internationally, Kaiser's book offers members of boards and staffs the information they need to create the healthy atmosphere necessary to thriving arts organizations. Organized in a clear, readable, question and-answer format, Leading Roles covers every aspect of board participation in the life of the organization, including mission and governance; fundraising and marketing responsibilities; the relationship of the board to the artistic director, executive director, and staff; and its responsibilities for planning and budgeting. Kaiser addresses boards in crisis, international boards, and boards of arts organizations of color. Throughout, he emphasizes the importance of transparency and clarity in the board's dealings with its own members and those of the arts community of which it is a part, showing how anything less results in contentiousness that can immobilize an arts organization, or even tear it apart. --Book Jacket.Michael M. Kaiser's personal history with boards of arts organizations began when he served on the board of the Washington Opera (now the Washington National Opera) in 1983. Today, in his capacity as president of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Kaiser recently completed a so-state, 69-city Arts in Crisis tour. Board issues came up repeatedly as central to the success or failure of the organization. --Not-for-profit arts organizations struggled to survive the recent economic recession. In this increasingly hardscrabble environment, it is absolutely imperative that the boards of these organizations function as energetically, creatively, and efficiently as possible. --
Subjects: Arts boards; Arts;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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101 ways to turn your business green : the business guide to eco-friendly profits / by Mintzer, Richard.(CARDINAL)757550;
Embrace green -- Make a time commitment for greening your business -- Start with an energy audit -- Decrase your carbon footprint -- Design your office in an eco-friendly manner -- Become an eco-friendly shopper -- Start an office recycling program -- Know your plastics (and sort by number) -- Institute a green purchasing policy -- Use green office supplies -- Use energy-efficient appliances -- Switch to energy-efficient lighting -- Upgrade and maintain your HVAC system -- Insulate your facility properly -- Insulate or replace windows and doors -- Quick tip : buy air conditioner and vent covers -- Quick tip : pool your office resources -- Pool your resources with other homebased business owners -- Create a green home office -- Quick tip : green up your bathroom -- Explore passive solar heating and cooling -- Consider a "cool" green roof -- Quick tip : try chilled beans -- Go solar -- Use wind turbine power -- Install eco-friendly flooring -- Start a "save water" program -- Install a water filtration system -- Utilize rainwater -- Use indoor plants as natural air filters -- Start a paper waste prevention program -- Switch to green printing -- Use greener signage -- Implement sustainable packaging policies -- Minimize and redesign your packaging -- Use eco-friendly packaging labels -- Use eco-friendly packing materials -- Consider reusable bags over plastic or paper -- Switch to energy-efficient computer use -- When buying new computers, buy greener models -- Start a company-wide computer/cartridge e-cycling program -- Quick tip : switch to e-signatures -- Recycle cell phones for the planet and for charity -- Quick tip : use rechargeable batteries -- Quick tip : go with voice mail -- Have a waste audit done -- Quick tip : reduce holiday party waste -- Consider composting -- Share your waste -- Start an anti-litter campaign -- Clean green -- Maintain a high level of indoor air quality -- Stop junk mail from coming to your office -- Work with green vendors and suppliers -- Quick tip : avoid shipping air -- Work with local suppliers -- Make your internal shipping needs greener -- Minimize excess inventory -- Revamp your products-get greener -- Think bio-plastics -- Make the switch to flex fuel or hybrid cars, vans, and trucks -- Think green tires -- Get environmental roadside assistance and use green travel services -- Encourage alternative forms of commuting -- Create more telecommuting opportunities -- Think greener business travel -- Offset business travel with green tags -- Change the coffee culture in your office -- Quick tip : hold greener meetings -- Create a green team -- Produce a sustainability report -- Hire a Director of Sustainability -- Establish a consumer recycling program -- Dress greener -- Use green marketing and promotion -- Embrace word-of-mouth marketing -- Conduct surveys to gauge your customers' interest in the environment -- Quick tip : minimize the media blitz -- Consider moving into a green office building -- Expanding your facility? build green -- Moving part II : consider a brownfield -- Maintain some green acreage -- Consider downsizing -- Start a program of company-wide volunteer hours -- Support and sponsor environmental groups and causes -- Become a role model : educate others on sustainability -- Become the green center for your community -- Produce a green newsletter -- Lobby for green -- Attract green employees -- Treat your employess to wellness -- Quick tip : gift green -- Go organic -- Quick tip : create a company library -- Provide green incentives -- Look for transparency in certifications and ecolabels -- Consider socially responsible investing -- Buy carbon offsets -- Rate your own corporate citizenship -- Teach future generations -- Don't stop.
Subjects: Management; Business enterprises; Green marketing.;
Available copies: 2 / Total copies: 2
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Who are you calling weird? / by Singer, Marilyn,author.(CARDINAL)126322; Daviz, Paul,illustrator.(CARDINAL)806077;
Delve into the forests, burrow under the ground, and dive into the deep to discover nature's most peculiar creatures and learn about their behavior, diet, and habitat, as well as folk beliefs about each animal. Hidden away in Earth's forests, caves, and oceans, these creatures might look or behave in peculiar ways but, as you will soon find out, every oddity serves a purpose: the long, skeletal finger of an aye-aye, used by this lemur to tap on trees to locate hollow tunnels where delicious insects hide, the barrel-shaped eyes of a Pacific barreleye fish that turn upward to watch for prey above through its transparent head, the big, bulbous nose of a proboscis monkey designed to attract mates, the armor-like scales of a pangolin that are so tough that even lions and tigers can't bite through them. Come face-to-face with the most curious creatures from across the globe, and decide for yourself who's the weirdest of them all.--AmazonNC980L
Subjects: Instructional and educational works.; Picture books.; Trivia and miscellanea.; Animals; Curiosities and wonders; Animals;
Available copies: 4 / Total copies: 4
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You bet your life : how I survived Jim Crow, racism, hurricane chasing, and gambling / by Christian, Spencer,author.(CARDINAL)332934;
Growing up poor and black in the rigidly segregated South, Spencer Christian relied on his family's solid work ethic, commitment to education, and Christian faith to carve a path to success and national visibility. As weatherman and co-host for ABC's Good Morning America, he thought he had everything-a loving wife and children, a beautiful home, and a rewarding and remarkable career. Yet, he was living a double life. For nearly 30 years, he was a compulsive gambler. By the time he found the courage to confront his dependence, he had lost millions, his home, his job-and most important-his family. You Bet Your Life tells the roller-coaster story of Christian's rise to success and crash to rock bottom. It also details his rebounding, rebuilding, and recovering of hope and happiness. This gripping and transparent tale will amuse, shock, and inspire.
Subjects: Autobiographies.; Christian, Spencer.; African Americans; Compulsive gamblers; Gamblers; Television personalities;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 2
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The single parent's guide to raising godly children / by Cooke, Shae.(CARDINAL)564626;
Includes bibliographical references."As a single mom currently raising her son; herself raised in both a broken home and a whole foster home , and drawing from her experience caring for single-parented children and from the experiences of others, author Shae Cooke sees both sides of the parent and child struggle, and the possibilities. With wit, humor, and honest transparency concerning her own family's imperfect state, The Single Parent's Guide to Raising Godly Children offers practical, realistic, and proactive suggestions and resources to help relieve the analysis paralysis, worry, and guilt so often associated with the task of solo child-rearing, ultimately freeing the family into whole living." --publisher.
Subjects: Parenting; Christian education of children.;
Available copies: 0 / Total copies: 1
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Worldchanging : a user's guide for the 21st century / by Steffen, Alex.(CARDINAL)287114;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 538-546) and index.STUFF: Questioning consumption -- Consuming responsibly -- Understanding trade -- Creating healthy homes -- Doing the right thing can be delicious -- Buying better food everywhere -- Eating better meat and fish -- Preserving barnyard biodiversity -- Cars and fuel -- Bright green consumerism -- Designing a sustainable world -- Picking green materials -- Craft it yourself -- Engineer it yourself -- Art meets technology -- Biomimicry -- Nanotechnology -- Neobiological industry -- Knowing what's green -- Producer responsibility -- Collaborative design -- Open source -- Design for development -- Bright green computers -- SHELTERS: Green remodeling -- Building a green home -- Living well in a compact space -- Developing green housing -- Furniture and home decor -- Lighting -- Energy -- Using energy efficiently -- Green power -- Going off the grid -- Smart grids -- Water -- Conserving water -- Thinking differently about water -- Landscaping -- EcoHouse Brazil -- Refugees -- Reinventing the refugee camp -- Transforming disaster relief -- Open-source humanitarian design -- Land mines -- Rethinking refugee reconstruction -- CITIES: The bright green city -- Vancouver -- Portland -- Retrofitting the suburbs -- Big green buildings and skyscrapers -- Healing polluted land -- Greening infrastructure -- Place-making -- Urban transportation -- Product-service systems -- Chinese cities of the future -- Lagos -- Megacity innovations -- The hidden vitality of slums -- Leapfrogging -- ICT4D -- Brazil's Telecentros -- Leapfrogging infrastructure -- COMMUNITY: Holistic problem solving -- Education and literacy -- Educating girls and empowering women -- Public health -- South-south science -- Copyfight -- Urban community development -- Community capital -- Microfinance -- Social entrepreneurship -- Giving well -- The barefoot college -- Travel and tourism -- Global culture -- BUSINESS: Your money -- Creating business value from sustainability -- Green marketing -- Brands -- Thriving in a bright green economy -- Seeing the big picture -- Start-up 101 -- POLITICS: Movement building -- Networking politics -- Amplifying your voice -- Connecting with others -- Tools for talking -- Demanding transparency -- Demanding human rights -- Watching the watchers -- Protest -- Direct action -- Nonviolent revolution -- Ending violence -- PLANET: Placing yourself -- Citizen science -- Restoration ecology -- Ecosystem services -- Biodiversity: how much nature is enough? Sustainable forestry -- Creating rural sustainability in the global south -- Future of the small town -- Local greenhouse forecast -- Climate foresight -- A personal action plan -- Mapping -- Charting the deep oceans -- Polar regions -- The solar system: greens in space -- Imagining the future.
Subjects: Environmentalism.; Green movement.; Sustainable development.;
Available copies: 2 / Total copies: 2
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What would Google do? / by Jarvis, Jeff,1954-(CARDINAL)493579;
Google rules -- New Relationship. Give the people control and we will use it -- Dell hell -- Your worst customer is your best friend -- Your best customer is your partner -- New Architecture. The link changes everything -- Do what you do best and link to the rest -- Join a network -- Be a platform -- Think distributed -- New Publicness. If you're not searchable, you won't be found -- Everybody needs Googlejuice -- Life is public, so is business -- Your customers are your ad agency -- New Society. Elegant organization -- New Economy. Small is the new big -- The post-scarcity economy -- Join the open-source, gift economy -- The mass market is dead; long live the mass of niches -- Google commodifies everything -- Welcome to the Google economy -- New Business Reality. Atoms are a drag -- Middlemen are doomed -- Free is a business model -- Decide what business you're in -- New Attitude. There is an inverse relationship between control and trust -- Trust the people -- Listen -- New Ethic. Make mistakes well -- Life is a beta -- Be honest -- Be transparent -- Collaborate -- Don't be evil -- New Speed. Answers are instantaneous -- Life is live -- Mobs form in a flash -- New Imperatives. Beware the cash cow in the coal mine -- Encourage, enable, and protect innovation -- Simplify, simplify -- Get out of the way -- If Google ruled the world -- Media. The Google Times: newspapers, post-paper -- Googlewood: entertainment, opened up -- GoogleCollins: killing the book to save it -- Advertising. And now, a word from Google's sponsors. -- Retail -- Google eats: a business built on openness -- Google shops: a company built on people -- Utilities. Google power & light: what Google would do -- GT&T: what Google should do -- Manufacturing. The Googlemobile: from secrecy to sharing -- Google Cola: we're more than consumers -- Service. Google Air: a social marketplace of customers -- Google Real Estate: information is power -- Money. Google capital: money makes networks -- The First Bank of Google: markets minus middlemen -- Public welfare. St. Google's Hospital: the benefits of publicness -- Google Mutual Insurance: the business of cooperation -- Public Institutions. Google U: opening education -- The United States of Google: geeks rule -- Exceptions. PR and lawyers: hopeless -- God and Apple: beyond Google? -- Generation G.A manual for survival and success that asks the most important question today's leaders, in any industry, can ask themselves: What would Google do? To demonstrate how to emulate Google, Jarvis lays out his laws of what he calls "the new Google century," including such insights as: Think distributed; Become a platform; Join the post-scarcity, open-source, gift economy; The middleman has died; Your worst customers are your best friends and your best customers are your partners; Do what you do best and link to the rest; Get out of the way; Make mistakes well; and more. He applies these principles not just to emerging technologies and the Internet, but to other industries--telecommunications, airlines, television, government, healthcare, education, journalism, and, yes, book publishing--showing ultimately what the world would look like if Google ran it. The result will change the way readers ask questions and solve problems.--From publisher description.
Subjects: Google.; Creative ability in business.; Information technology; Management.; Technological innovations.;
Available copies: 3 / Total copies: 5
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The conversations with God companion : the essential tool for individual and group study / by Walsch, Neale Donald.(CARDINAL)341071;
Introduction -- God never shuts up -- Section 2: And nothing but the truth, so help you God -- Section 3: Please pay it no mind -- Section 4: And now, a word from our sponsor -- Section 5: Like what is unlike what you like -- Section 6: Can you believe the promise of God? -- Section 7: My ultimate fear is this -- Who is God? -- Section 2: What good are values? -- Section 3: You, too, can have a dialogue with God -- The Holy Triad -- Section 2: Hey, what's the big idea? -- Section 3: Big dividends from small change -- Section 4: Change your purpose in life -- Section 5: Who do you think you are, anyway? -- Stop trying to learn -- How God takes command -- Section 2: The renunciation of renunciation -- Section 3: Expecting no more expectations -- "Suffering succotash!" -- The path of the householder -- Relating to relationship -- Section 2: The virtue of being self-centered -- Section 3: Doing what is best for you -- Section 4: The best wedding vows ever -- You are the truth -- Real love knows no conditions -- The money game -- Being versus doing -- Section 2: Want not, waste not -- Section 3: You're nobody -- Just for the health of it Section 2: Your true relationship with God -- In closing -- The prayer that never ends -- Moving on to book 2 -- Discovering the will of God -- Changing your mind -- Even this will pass away -- Creating divinity -- Educating our young -- A crisis of caring -- Transparency as a lifestyle -- Additional inquiries, book 2 -- Moving now to book 3 -- The parable of the rock -- God will never forgive you -- The question of death -- About promises-and creation -- Highly evolved beings."Updated and expanded, this new edition includes exercises and study questions for all three books in the Conversations with God series"--Provided by publisher.
Subjects: Textbooks.; Trivia and miscellanea.; Walsch, Neale Donald.; God; Private revelations.; Spiritual life;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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The moon and serpent bumper book of magic / by Moore, Alan,1953-author.(CARDINAL)771205; Moore, Steve,1949-2014,author.(CARDINAL)637991; Parkhouse, Steve,artist.(CARDINAL)431657; Wickey, Ben,artist.; Veitch, Rick,artist.(CARDINAL)763111; O'Neill, Kevin,1953-2022,artist.(CARDINAL)555651; Coulthart, John,1962-artist,book designer.(CARDINAL)786199; Klein, Todd,letterer.(CARDINAL)381651; Romain Janicki,colorist.;
"The most acclaimed writer in comics history, Alan Moore, joins his late mentor Steve Moore (no relation) for one last graphic grimoire: a sprawling and stunning introduction to magic in all its timeless forms, brought to life by six wondrous and whimsical artists. Splendid news for enquiring minds, and guaranteed salvation for humanity! Messrs. Steve and Alan Moore, proprietors of the celebrated Moon and Serpent Grand Egyptian Theatre of Marvels (sorcery by appointment since circa 150 AD), have produced a clear and practical grimoire of the occult sciences that offers endless necromantic fun for all the family. Exquisitely illuminated by a host of adepts including Kevin O'Neill, John Coulthart, Steve Parkhouse, Rick Veitch, Melinda Gebbie, and Ben Wickey, this marvellous and unprecedented tome promises to provide all that the reader could conceivably need in order to commence a fulfilling new career as a diabolist. Its contents include profusely illustrated instructional essays upon this ancient sect's theories of magic, notably the key dissertation "Adventures in Thinking," which gives reliable advice as to how entry into the world of magic may be readily achieved. Further to this, a number of "Rainy Day" activity pages present lively and entertaining things to do once the magical state has been attained, including such popular pastimes as divination, etheric travel, and the conjuring of a colourful multitude of spirits, deities, dead people, and infernal entities from the pit, all of whom are sure to become your new best friends. Also contained within this extravagant compendium of thaumaturgic lore is a history of magic from the last ice age to the present day, told in a series of easy-to-absorb pictorial biographies of fifty great enchanters and complemented by a variety of picture stories depicting events ranging from the Palaeolithic origins of art, magic, language, and consciousness to the rib-tickling comedy exploits of Moon and Serpent founder Alexander the False Prophet ("He's fun, he's fake, he's got a talking snake!"). In addition to these manifold delights, the adventurous reader will also discover a series of helpful travel guides to mind-wrenching alien dimensions that are within comfortable walking distance, as well as profiles of the many quaint local inhabitants that one might bump into at these exotic resorts. A full range of entertainments will be provided, encompassing such diverse novelties and pursuits as a lavishly decorated, decadent pulp tale of occult adventure recounted in the serial form. Completing this almost-unimaginable treasure trove is a lengthy thesis revealing the ultimate meaning of both the Moon and the Serpent in a manner that makes transparent the much-obscured secret of magic, happiness, sex, creativity, and the known Universe, while at the same time explaining why these lunar and ophidian symbols feature so prominently in the order's peculiar name. (Manufacturer's disclaimer: This edition does not, however, reveal why the titular cabal of magicians consider themselves to be either grand or Egyptian. Let the buyer beware.) A colossal and audacious publishing triumph of three hundred and fifty-two pages, beautifully produced in the finest tradition of educational literature for young people, The Moon and Serpent Bumper Book of Magic will transform your lives, your reality, and any spare lead that you happen to have lying around into the purest and most radiant gold."--provided by publisher.
Subjects: Graphic novels.; Comics (Graphic works); Magic;
Available copies: 2 / Total copies: 2
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An American sickness : how healthcare became big business and how you can take it back / by Rosenthal, Elisabeth,1956-author.(CARDINAL)624105;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 349-392) and index."An award-winning New York Times reporter Dr. Elisabeth Rosenthal reveals the dangerous, expensive, and dysfunctional American healthcare system, and tells us exactly what we can do to solve its myriad of problems. It is well documented that our healthcare system has grave problems, but how, in only a matter of decades, did things get this bad? Dr. Elisabeth Rosenthal doesn't just explain the symptoms; she diagnoses and treats the disease itself. Rosenthal spells out in clear and practical terms exactlyhow to decode medical doublespeak, avoid the pitfalls of the pharmaceuticals racket, and get the care you and your family deserve. She takes you inside the doctor-patient relationship, explaining step by step the workings of a profession sorely lacking transparency. This is about what we can do, as individual patients, both to navigate a byzantine system and also to demand far-reaching reform. Breaking down the monolithic business into its individual industries--the hospitals, doctors, insurance companies, drug manufacturers--that together constitute our healthcare system, Rosenthal tells the story of the history of American medicine as never before. The situation is far worse than we think, and it has become like that much more recently than we realize.Hospitals, which are managed by business executives, behave like predatory lenders, hounding patients and seizing their homes. Research charities are in bed with big pharmaceutical companies, which surreptitiously profit from the donations made by working people. Americans are dying from routine medical conditions when affordable and straightforward solutions exist. Dr. Rosenthal explains for the first time how various social and financial incentives have encouraged a disastrous and immoral system to spring up organically in a shockingly short span of time. The system is in tatters, but we can fight back. An American Sickness is the frontline defense against a healthcare system that no longer has our well-being at heart"--
Subjects: Medical care; Medical policy; Health care reform; Health insurance; Hospital care; Consumer education.; Medical care.;
Available copies: 33 / Total copies: 36
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