
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Atul Gawande is a surgeon, professor at Harvard Medical School, and writes about medicine and ethics for the New Yorker. He’s author of several best-selling books, most recently, Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End. The book questions the human cost of miraculous medicine, and urges a shift from the prevailing thought that human decline and death are signs of failures to instead think about how to make old age and the experience of dying better. Despite the grave topic, Gawande views it as a book about living. We spoke to him in the greenroom at The Music Hall in Portsmouth before a Writers on a New England Stage live event.
Episode music by Uncanny Valleys.
Please take a moment to take our listener survey at survey.megaphone.fm
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
4.4
137137 ratings
Atul Gawande is a surgeon, professor at Harvard Medical School, and writes about medicine and ethics for the New Yorker. He’s author of several best-selling books, most recently, Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End. The book questions the human cost of miraculous medicine, and urges a shift from the prevailing thought that human decline and death are signs of failures to instead think about how to make old age and the experience of dying better. Despite the grave topic, Gawande views it as a book about living. We spoke to him in the greenroom at The Music Hall in Portsmouth before a Writers on a New England Stage live event.
Episode music by Uncanny Valleys.
Please take a moment to take our listener survey at survey.megaphone.fm
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
3,096 Listeners
3,861 Listeners
10,128 Listeners
38,014 Listeners
3,305 Listeners
610 Listeners
26,182 Listeners
117 Listeners
212 Listeners
12 Listeners
1,433 Listeners
2,073 Listeners
59,125 Listeners
2,498 Listeners
32,478 Listeners
14,941 Listeners
811 Listeners
1,343 Listeners
324 Listeners
29 Listeners
15,225 Listeners
1,428 Listeners
59 Listeners
258 Listeners