Reviews
A powerful assessment of medicine's involvement with death and dying: a history highly recommended for any medical or ethical issues holding.
Few libraries specializing in the history of medicine will not find this a valuable book to include in their collections.
This is an important book that sets current debates over end-of-life care in their historical context, and reminds readers of the numerous historical decisions that shape the current situation.
Abel's book is a strong and welcome addition to the historiography of death and dying.
An invaluable contribution. Abel does an admirable job uncovering a topic that was mostly absent in the medical literature. She successfully highlights a striking consequence of medicine's curative paradigm while also recovering the vital work that family and faith performed to fill the gap left by medical professionals in the twentieth century.
Lively and engaging. The Inevitable Hour offers a sensitive, patient-centered view of end-of-life experiences. Abel's gift for biography, of both the eminent and the obscure, provides a glimpse into a rich yet private world. It makes an important contribution to American medical history and to our understanding of human responses to suffering and adversity.
Through her in-depth analyses of hundreds of letters, articles, and books from the mid-eighteenth century to 1965 in the United States, the author of this book provides a very sobering and enlightening perspective on the perennial challenge of caring for the dying and the history of medical science's own avoidance of it even while trying to treat it.
The US way of dying is costly, conflicted, and confused, and apparently has long been so, according to Emily Abel’s deeply researched and carefully argued The Inevitable Hour ... The book is richly researched with an impressive range of documentation.
Emily Abel’s thoroughly researched book steps into [a] broad historical narrative and gives context, detail, and definition.
While the work's narrative structure makes it ideal to read as a whole, each chapter could be excerpted in both upper- and lower-level classes in history, health policy, bioethics and religion. The work's accessible style makes it accommodating to undergraduates and laypeople, while its rigorous, inventive methods and ambitious claims ensure its value for scholars... Ultimately, Abel's book is of great importance to not only historical scholarship but also contemporary bioethics and health policy.
With breadth and compassion, Abel presents a historical moment in health care through the lens of dying patients and their families, and, as such, contributes to our understanding of our modern ethos of medical treatment and medical failures.
With the immediacy of a novelist and the critical insights of a historian, Emily Abel offers a sobering reinterpretation of medical history from the perspective of the dying. Intimate, eye-opening, and altogether engrossing, The Inevitable Hour should change how we live as well as how we die.
The Inevitable Hour is as much a history of medical care as it is a cultural history of dying in the United States. Through careful and creative scholarship, Emily Abel critically explores key misconceptions in the understanding of care for the dying and undermines the assumptions supporting each. The book clearly documents that disparities exist for the disadvantaged in dying as well as in health status and access to health care. Because many deaths prior to Medicare legislation in 1965 occurred in settings rarely characterized by advances in medical care or in private homes, scholars have paid scant attention to this essential time of life. Abel has remedied that lack. Her work is timely and of considerable import for policy makers, scholars, and the general public as the population continues to age and increasing numbers of the baby boomer generation confront their ‘Inevitable Hour.’
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Good Death at Home
2. Medical Professionals (Sometimes) Step In
3. Cultivating Detachment, Sidetracking Care
4. Institutionalizing the Incurable
5. "All Our Dread and
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Good Death at Home
2. Medical Professionals (Sometimes) Step In
3. Cultivating Detachment, Sidetracking Care
4. Institutionalizing the Incurable
5. "All Our Dread and Apprehension"
6. "Nothing More to Do"
7. A Place to Die
8. The Sacred and the Spiritual
Conclusion
Notes
Index