Facing the prospect of a career-ending disability as she adjusts to life with multiple sclerosis, Dr. Lisa Doggett is forced to maintain a new level of uncertainty and vulnerability, and the everyday fear that something new will go fallacious. Taking off her white coat—becoming a patient herself—she confronts not possible fears, copes with her limitations, and sidesteps her skepticism of alternative medicine to are searching for help from unlikely sources. Drawing on riveting patient stories, Doggett reveals the dark realities of the dysfunctional U.S. healthcare system, made the entire more stark when she becomes the one seeking care.
MS pushes Doggett—a perfectionist at heart—to soften her inner drill sergeant and embrace self-compassion. As a patient, she learns to advocate for herself to make sure on-time medication deliveries and satisfactory remedy plans; to navigate chronic dizziness, relapses, and parenting frustrations; and to push her physical limits as a runner to go farther than ever before. As the director of a health clinic for the uninsured, Doggett’s MS inspires an even deeper empathy as she confronts challenging cases, prompting her to work harder on behalf of those in her care, many of whom struggle with illnesses more serious than her own.
This hopeful and uplifting book will encourage those living with chronic disease, and those supporting them, to power forward with courage and grace. It’s going to spark conversations to redefine perfect parenting and trigger uncomfortable discussions and outrage about the vicious inequalities of health care in the U.S. Most of all, It’s going to inspire readers to embrace the gifts of a less than excellent life and look for silver linings, despite life’s detours that sabotage plans and take them off their expected paths.
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