Suzanne DeJohn
Suzanne DeJohn
31 Toms Rd.
Candler, NC 28715
828/670-5248
Illustrations using scratchboard, watercolor, cut paper, pencil, and pen and ink.
The U.S. spends more on health care than any other nation. Does that money buy what it should? Not according to Dartmouth research on regional variations in spending and outcomes. But policy-makers are now paying attention to the DMS work—and therein may lie a solution to the money-medicine puzzle.
Physicians, for all their knowledge about health, sometimes fall prey to serious illness and injury—and find themselves on the receiving end of the stethoscope. Or individuals with experience as a patient sometimes decide to enter medicine—and become the person wielding the stethoscope. In either case, their patients often benefit.
A Dartmouth physician who is also a much-published poet recently had his work featured on National Public Radio's Writer's Almanac.
Medical decisions are often far from clear-cut. A DMS graduate writes about an elderly patient who was rushed to the hospital after a stroke. He had to decide whether a powerful drug would save her life . . . or kill her.
Suzanne DeJohn
Suzanne DeJohn
31 Toms Rd.
Candler, NC 28715
828/670-5248
Illustrations using scratchboard, watercolor, cut paper, pencil, and pen and ink.