
His writing style is clear, engaging, cohesive, and precise. He incorporates both the dramatic narrative we've come to enjoy and the science; he describes his clinical research with the WHO and the study design in a fashion far more convincing and interesting than the medical journal article it produced. His writing is accessible to anyone, not just health care professionals.
The argument is not particularly new, innovative, or brilliant, but the way he puts it together is persuasive. He tells us what we already know - medicine is hard. It's complicated and complex, much like flying an airplane. Checklists allow a basic framework that demonstrably improves outcomes. Communication between team members is central to taking care of a patient. All of these concepts are simple, yet their implementation in modern medicine is slow and incomplete. The Checklist Manifesto explores why and how things should change.
This New York Times Bestseller and Amazon Best Book of the Month is a must-read for anyone interested in health policy and health outcomes, and it is a highly recommended read for everyone else. It certainly has changed the way I view the world. Those who know me know that I love lists; ever since college, I've made a checklist of things to do pretty much every day (and I pretty much never accomplish all the things on my list). The checklist works; I'm sold on the idea.
Image shown under Fair Use, from gawande.com
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