Thomas Fisher is a board-certified emergency medicine physician from Chicago. He has worked to improve health care as an academic, health insurance executive, and White House Fellow in the Obama administration. His path includes training as Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholar, being honored as a Crain's Chicago Business 40 under 40, and inclusion in the Aspen Institute's Health Innovators Fellowship. He is an epicure and a runner, and for the past twenty years he has worked in the emergency department at the University of Chicago, serving the same South Side community where he was raised.
“This book reminds us how permanently interesting our bodies are,
especially when they go wrong. Fisher’s account of his days is
gripping. . . . His frustration, his outraged intelligence, is
palpable on every page. . . . the best account I’ve read about
working in a busy hospital during Covid.” —The New York Times
“A briskly paced, heartfelt, often harrowing year in the life of an
ER doctor on Chicago’s historically Black South Side.” —San
Francisco Chronicle
“The Emergency is graphic and gut-wrenching, as it should
be. It is an undeniable call for a just health-care
system, as it will be.”—Ibram X. Kendi, author of How to Be an
Antiracist
“With scalpel-like precision and searing patient stories, Thomas
Fisher exposes the battlefield of medicine and the scarring—and
often fatal—wounds of inequality. The Emergency is a bat call.
Health care doesn’t care, inequality kills, and we must do
better.”—Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, author of What the Eyes Don’t
See
“The Emergency is a doctor’s-eye view of the layered crises
afflicting a single Chicago community and the entire nation that
surrounds it. By turns brutal and beautiful, this is a tale of
life, death, and the people whose efforts often determine which of
those two will prevail.”—Jelani Cobb, co-editor of The Matter of
Black Lives
“Tired of reading about COVID-19? Don’t make the mistake of missing
the best book about it to date. The Emergency is Thomas Fisher’s
memoir of the first year of the pandemic’s grip on Chicago’s South
Side, where he grew up and where he battled the disease, along with
every other ailment and injury that reached his emergency
room. This is no past-tense memoir but a gripping
account of events as they happen. It’s beautifully rendered in
the present tense and leavened by a series of letters he composed
to, and in honor of, his patients. But this is also a book
about our country, a wrenching and tender reflection on
an aphorism Fisher invokes: When America catches a cold, black
America catches pneumonia. It won’t take you long to read this
fast-paced account, but you won’t forget it anytime soon.”—Paul
Farmer, M.D., author of Pathologies of Power: Health, Human Rights,
and the New War on the Poor
“Riveting . . . [Fisher] eloquently captures the intensity of the
situation . . . and shares heartrending stories of victims. . . .
The result is a powerful reckoning with racial injustice and a
moving portrait of everyday heroism.”—Publishers Weekly (starred
review)
“Dramatic . . . well written and compassionate . . . a persuasive,
sympathetic . . . insider’s report on a broken system.”—Kirkus
Reviews
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