Scan barcode
Reviews tagging 'Forced institutionalization'
The Black Angels: The Untold Story of the Nurses Who Helped Cure Tuberculosis by Maria Smilios
3 reviews
eyre_apparent's review against another edition
dark
emotional
hopeful
informative
inspiring
reflective
sad
medium-paced
5.0
A powerful telling of a history that could have been lost to time.
Graphic: Child death, Chronic illness, Death, Hate crime, Racism, Terminal illness, Violence, Forced institutionalization, Blood, Medical content, Medical trauma, and Pandemic/Epidemic
Moderate: Animal death, Bullying, Abandonment, and War
paintedanna's review against another edition
challenging
dark
informative
inspiring
medium-paced
5.0
The author excelled at explaining the public health crisis across several decades. Based off of interviews, this book reads more like fiction even though it packed with facts; the last half of the book is citations! I reflected on all the parallels with how public health officials handled Covid-19, knowing humans struggle to unite when faced with pathogens.
Graphic: Death, Hate crime, Racism, Terminal illness, Forced institutionalization, Blood, Police brutality, Medical content, Medical trauma, War, and Pandemic/Epidemic
moonbasket's review against another edition
emotional
sad
tense
slow-paced
5.0
I was appalled and inspired by the things I learned in this book. I am a young white man in the United States, so tuberculosis and segregation are things that have been taught to me as things "of the past." This book drove home the intergenerational impact of segregation and the difficulties Black people faced during integration. It was visceral and poignant. As good stories do, it allowed me to more easily empathize with the women of the history and so I learned their stories better.
The book also showed the raw truth of the final decades of tuberculosis in the United States. It is gruesome at times, but not gory. The author walks the line between the medical details and the human emotions of the situation that keeps things from being too technica or too gross.
I highly recommend this book for anyone interested in civil rights history in the US or medical history or communicable disease. Tuberculosis may not kill people in the US anymore, but it kills millions of people around the world every year and many of their deaths are preventable by drugs that they don't have access to for one reason or another.
The book also showed the raw truth of the final decades of tuberculosis in the United States. It is gruesome at times, but not gory. The author walks the line between the medical details and the human emotions of the situation that keeps things from being too technica or too gross.
I highly recommend this book for anyone interested in civil rights history in the US or medical history or communicable disease. Tuberculosis may not kill people in the US anymore, but it kills millions of people around the world every year and many of their deaths are preventable by drugs that they don't have access to for one reason or another.
Graphic: Chronic illness, Death, Racism, Sexism, Terminal illness, Excrement, Medical content, Grief, Classism, and Pandemic/Epidemic
Moderate: Forced institutionalization