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Must We All Die? : Alaska's Enduring Struggle w Tuberculosis SIGNED 1st Fortuine

$ 52.8

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Author: Robert Fortuine
  • ISBN: 1889963690
  • Edition: First
  • Tribal Affiliation: Alaska Native
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Title: Must We All Die?
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Subtitle: Alaska's Enduring Struggle With Tuberculosis
  • Year Published: 2005
  • Features: Signed by the Author
  • Publisher: University of Alaska Press
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Format: Hardcover Book
  • Condition: New
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back

    Description

    Must We All Die? : Alaska's Enduring Struggle with Tuberculosis[SIGNED FIRST EDITION]
    by Robert Fortuine
    Condition: As New
    2005 University of Alaska Press. 264 pp. trade hardcover format. As new condition, SIGNED & DATED(10/26/05) BY THE AUTHOR. Not remainder marked. Text is clean, unmarked bright & unread. Boards clean. Binding tight & straight.
    From the Publisher:
    Alaska Natives have struggled with the 'white plague' of tuberculosis for centuries. At last, physician and historian Robert Fortuine brings their story to light. He provides a comprehensive account of tuberculosis from its earliest occurrence in prehistory through the latest outbreaks, made more threatening by HIV/AIDS.
    Fortuine describes the courage and self-sacrifice of itinerant nurses who endured challenging and often dangerous conditions, as well as the efforts of doctors who fought cuts in funding as valiantly as they battled for the lives of their patients.
    Fortuine chronicles the removal of tuberculosis victims, many of them children, from their families and villages to hospitals in the Lower 48 states. He describes treatments, medical advances, and day-to-day life for the nurses, physicians, missionaries and teachers who worked to stem the tide that killed and disabled thousands. The struggle against tuberculosis in Alaska is a story of triumph against untold suffering and crippling odds, but it is also a cautionary tale, as villages experience the re-emergence of an increasingly resistant disease in the twenty-first century.
    Must We All Die?
    is a timely and encyclopedic contribution to the history of medicine. Historians and health care professionals will hail the volume as a classic, a tribute to those who fought tuberculosis and to the Alaska Natives who endured a cruel disease that destroyed families and ravaged villages.