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The book 'Running from Heaven Can't Escape Pain' tells about life in the hospital through the doctor's perspective

Báo Quốc TếBáo Quốc Tế01/09/2023


The book Run to the Sky Without Pain won the 'Book of the Year' award at the 2018 British Book Awards and was a 'Sunday Times Bestseller'.
Cuốn sách ‘Chạy trời không khỏi đau’: Bác sĩ cũng biết ‘đau’
The book "Running from Heaven Can't Help Pain" is published by Kim Dong Publishing House.

First published in 2017, Adam Kay's book Run Away From Pain is one of the best medical diaries, describing the hardships and injustices that young doctors have to endure in their first years of practice.

It seems like this is just a very dry and academic medical diary. However, with the grace of the words, the author has turned his memories at the hospital into extremely humorous but no less profound and painful stories when hospital life is seen through the lens of a doctor.

Throughout the work, readers have the opportunity to literally “laugh their eyes out”. With his humorous, satirical and satirical writing style, Adam Kay makes readers have moments of extreme entertainment with the daily situations that are both funny and sad in the hospital. Along with that are also sad notes about the difficulties and hardships that the author and his colleagues have to go through.

The life of a young doctor is described by the author as “Working 97 hours a week. Having to make life-or-death decisions. Constantly being submerged in tsunamis of blood and bodily fluids. The salary received is not equal to the revenue of the parking fee”.

In addition, medical staff also face risks of exposure and psychological trauma when witnessing accidents during work, but their own trauma is not properly cared for. Many factors contributed to the sad ending when the author ended his medical career after “six years of university studies and another six years working in the hospital”.

The book helps readers understand the underlying causes of the wave of resignations and abandonment of doctors and nurses in the UK in particular and around the world in general, including Vietnam. Behind the curtain, the medical profession is not only glamorous and respected. The medical team needs to be understood, cared for and sympathized with more because "the nature of medical treatment is that they have to go through more bad things at work than good things".

Along with helping readers have relaxing moments but also being deeply moved by the cycle of birth, aging, illness, and death at the hospital, Running to the Sky to Get Rid of Pain is a useful reference source, providing a close-up view of the work of medical staff for students, medical students and their parents to support them on the threshold of entering adulthood.

Adam Kay is an award-winning comedian, film and television writer. After six years of studying at medical school, in 2004, Adam Kay officially joined the ranks of doctors in the UK's National Health Service. From his starting point as a resident physician and case manager for a public hospital in London, to becoming a specialist in pediatrics and reproductive health, he has proven his talent and made many contributions in examining and treating patients, especially in rare emergency cases.


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