Six decades ago, researchers achieved the impossible: a treatment that made kidney failure a manageable condition instead of a Death sentence.
A triumph of investigative research, Tom Mueller\'s book features an unforgettable cast of characters: CEOs who dress as Musketeers to exhort more aggressive profit-seeking, nephrologist insiders who reveal the substandard care this causes, and heroic patients who risk their lives to reveal the truth..
After Congress made renal disease the only Medicare for All condition, Big Dialysis proliferated, and the Hippocratic oath gave way to the profit motive.
A gripping microcosm of American health care gone wrong, How to Make a Killing recounts how the optimism of the 1950s and 1960s--when transplants and early dialysis machines offered hope--gave way to anguished debates about the ethics of rationing (and profiting from) life-saving care.
And yet, in the hands of a predatory medical industry, this triumph led to skyrocketing costs and worsening care.
Six decades ago, researchers achieved the impossible: a treatment that made kidney failure a manageable condition instead of a Death sentence