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"Humane Treatment"
~ an excerpt from the new book ~ Noble Vision by Gen LaGreca
The excerpt, below, is from the new book, Noble Vision,
a thinking person's thriller that blends medicine, romance, and
individualism. Noble Vision is the story of brain surgeon
David Lang, on trial for performing unauthorized surgery under a
state-run healthcare system.
This excerpt involves a confrontation between protagonist Dr. David
Lang and Dr. Alice Cook, director of medical research at the Bureau of
Medicine (BOM). The BOM manages New York State's healthcare program,
CareFree, which all medical facilities and practitioners were forced to
adopt in the near past. Dr. David Lang has just presented arguments for
funding his research, which promises to revolutionize the treatment of
brain and spine injuries using a process for regenerating injured nerve
tissue. It is up to the BOM to decide whether or not to allow this
research to proceed.
Author Genevieve "Gen" LaGreca holds degrees in chemistry and
philosophy. She has worked as a pharmaceutical chemist, business owner,
and healthcare writer. She writes accurately about the human brain for
those who enjoy using theirs. More information about the author and the
book, Noble Vision, follows the excerpt. Enjoy!
"Humane Treatment" by Gen LaGreca
Dr. Alice Cook stepped behind the podium, as if to maintain a barrier
between her and the green eyes [of David Lang] staring insolently from a
seat at the table.
"Dr. Lang, after careful consideration, the committee finds that
although your work is valuable, it regrettably falls outside the scope
of our more pressing social needs. Many people now question the wisdom
of spending large sums for the benefit of a small minority when the
majority funding universal health care has other concerns. We must weigh
the relative value to society of offering one ground-breaking surgery to
the few individuals needing it against providing, for example, one
thousand pairs of contact lenses to those needing better vision."
Dr. Cook paused as if expecting a polite nod from David but received
none.
"You know, of course, that your research has been attempted by
countless others and always ended in failure, despite the initially
promising outcome of a few isolated experiments. I'm afraid we have a
responsibility to allocate public funds for projects benefiting more
people and having greater chances of success."
David scanned the faces of committee members, who nodded in
agreement. Like a jury in the presence of a judge, the others let Dr.
Cook do the talking.
"Unfortunately, our budget is limited, and for every project we
approve, there are twenty we must decline," Dr. Cook continued.
"However, we want to thank you, Dr. Lang, for the opportunity to
consider your research. Please feel free to submit other proposals to
us. And we wish you success in your career."
Dr. Cook smiled, but David did not return the courtesy.
"Frankly, Dr. Cook," he said, his voice solemn, his eyes intense, "I
don't want the public to fund my research. I don't want to have to fit
in with what this committee thinks it needs or feels will succeed. I
just want to be left alone to finish my work. I want to procure
laboratory animals and conduct experiments at my own expense or with the
aid of investors as a private venture. I'm prepared to do that. Now if
my work doesn't cost the public a dime, then this committee should not
have the power to object."
"But we do have that power, Dr. Lang. You know the law," replied Dr.
Cook. Her voice remained coolly polite, despite the flush that formed on
her cheeks. "Animals are protected. Their use in research is limited to
projects approved by the state. We can't allow anyone who feels like it
to butcher animals. That wouldn't be humane."
"Is it humane to squash seven years of research and stand in the way
of progress?"
"It's not progress, Dr. Lang, when researchers go off half-cocked and
are unaccountable to society," said Dr. Cook, her voice rising. "To
conduct animal experiments without the proper authorization would be a
serious infraction of the law."
One person folded his glasses into a case; another reached for her
purse. Dr. Cook gathered her papers. The meeting was over for all but
David.
"Where does that leave me and the thousands of patients who would
want my new procedure, Dr. Cook? Would these patients think it humane of
you to spare the animals and prevent me from properly testing the
treatment on them first?"
"You know perfectly well that I don't mean you can experiment on
humans instead. You first have to complete the animal trials."
"But thanks to this committee, I can't do the animal trials!"
"To perform your procedure and use your untested drugs on a human
subject without first obtaining exhaustive animal studies and the proper
regulatory approvals could expose you to serious consequences, Dr. Lang,
including loss of your license" -- Dr. Cook's voice dropped -- "and even
charges of manslaughter. Consider yourself warned."
David sprang from his chair and approached the podium to retrieve the
briefcase he had left there. He walked unduly close to the petite woman,
his tall form towering over her, his face hot with anger, his voice
heavy with contempt."Seven people sitting in a room don't have the right
to tell me how to do my work. Seven people don't have the right to deny
thousands of patients a treatment they'd want to have. Seven people
can't run medicine for the rest of us, Dr. Cook!"
Cool air rushed into the stuffy room as David swung the door open and
left.
About the Author
Author Genevieve "Gen" LaGreca holds a BS cum laude in chemistry from
Polytechnic Institute of New York and an MA in philosophy from Columbia
University. She has worked as a pharmaceutical chemist, business owner,
and staff writer for a management consulting firm in the healthcare
industry. As the ghost-writer for renowned educators in the healthcare
field, Ms. LaGreca has written dozens of magazine and newsletter
articles that offer timely commentaries on managed care and other
business issues facing medical professionals.
Her first novel, Noble Vision, was a
finalist in the Houston Manuscript Contest and garnered praise from
Steve Forbes, Nobel laureate Milton Friedman, economist and writer
Walter Williams, Past AMA President Edward Annis, and other influential
thinkers. The author's soon-to-be- published second novel was a
semi-finalist in the Pirate's Alley William Faulkner Creative Writing
Competition. Both novels offer a riveting plot and strong romance as
they delve deeply into the struggle of characters who seek freedom and
individuality in a controlling society.
About the Book
NOBLE
VISION by Gen LaGreca Published by Winged
Victory Press (ISBN 0-9744579-4-9, 338 pages, soft cover,
$14.95) Available through this site or directly from the
publisher: http://www.wingedvictorypress.com or phone
1-800-844-2114. Also available at bookstores, Laissez Faire Books, and Amazon.com. Distributed to the book trade by
Biblio/NBN.
In a chilling medical suspense novel, author Gen LaGreca creates two
powerful characters -- Nicole Hudson, the lovely ballerina who rose to
stardom from a deprived childhood only to have her life shattered by a
tragic accident, and Dr. David Lang, the impassioned neurosurgeon who is
determined to restore her health no matter what price he must pay.
The trouble is that Lang's revolutionary treatment -- a way of
regrowing injured nerve tissue to cure paralysis and other neurological
disorders -- is rejected by New York's state-run health system,
CareFree, a bureaucracy bogged down in budget overruns, red tape, and
political corruption.
On one level, Noble Vision is a tightly plotted,
beautifully written story, with intense conflicts and startling twists
-- pure entertainment. On another level, it is a duel of conflicting
ideologies, a struggle between private care and socialized medicine. If
the current health care system has ever left you feeling frustrated,
helpless, and afraid, this book will tell you why.
ENDORSEMENTS
"The defects of government-controlled medicine are dramatized
effectively in this page-turning story of the love of a brilliant
physician for a beautiful ballerina who becomes his patient." --
Milton Friedman, economist and Nobel laureate
"A gripping story from beginning to end, superimposed on the
realities of today's threats to quality medical care." -- Edward
Annis, MD, author of Code Blue, Past President of
the American Medical Association
"Salutary tale of what can happen to medical breakthroughs if Big
Government claws even deeper into our health care system!" --
Steve Forbes, President and CEO, Forbes magazine
"Noble Vision resembles an Ayn Rand novel -- only in color
rather than in stark black and white. It captivated me from beginning to
end. Its grim vision of the near future -- or is it the present? -- of
medicine is all too accurate." -- Jane M. Orient, MD, author
of Your Doctor Is Not In, Exec. Director, Assoc. of American
Physicians & Surgeons
"Genevieve LaGreca has given us an intriguing novel about how
unintended consequences of good intentions can have a devastating impact
on the healing professions." -- Walter E. Williams, professor,
George Mason University
"Noble Vision is a wonderful literary achievement. An
extraordinary hero, a tender love story, a fascinating medical
discovery, and an intense family conflict are dramatically interwoven in
a plot that surprises and delights." -- Edith Packer, JD, PhD,
psychologist __________________________________________________
Copyright (c) 2005 by Genevieve LaGreca. All Rights Reserved. Please
feel free to duplicate and distribute this file, as long as the excerpt
is not altered and this copyright notice is intact. Thank
you.
—(04/01/05)
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