Review of Surviving the Business of Healthcare
- Nino Chinonso Onwurah
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Review of Surviving the Business of Healthcare
For someone who comes from an ancestry of doctors and physicians, it would have been expected that she too became a doctor, but Barbara Galutia Regis PA-C first heeded her passion for music and became a music teacher.
At the time of writing Surviving the Business of Healthcare, she had already switched to the medical profession. Barbara has a lot of help to render to readers concerning many things that relate to their health in this book. Picking up this book to read is a time to open your mind and feed it with new knowledge that would be of great benefit to you.
Yes, this book is highly beneficial. One of its great benefits is that it gives valuable advice and information on issues concerning health and finances. The author exhaustively explained the different types of ailments that plague humans and the different ways in which they manifest. On financial matters, she doles out information on the locations where one can buy medications on a budget and at very economical rates.
Barbara Galutia Regis, PA-C, compares how healthcare services are carried out in health centers located in small towns to those in more developed cities. In the developed centers, services like emergency plans, health insurance schemes, and hospital admissions are obtainable, especially for residents of the United States of America.
It was interesting reading about the author's background. She comes from a little village called Coopersburg, and she is part of the fourth generation in the lineage of doctors. Her struggles with battling skin cancer at the time she was writing this book were also highlighted. The cancer type was amelanotic nodular melanoma. This part made me emotional, and I could not help but admire Barbara's courage. From this, I also learned how to take care of our health amid life's struggles and that of our loved ones.
I appreciate how the author made frantic efforts to warn against non-genuine and fake medical practitioners whose major aim is to take undue advantage of patients who seek medical attention and solutions by swindling them out of their hard-earned money.
I would give this book a rating of five out of five stars because while reading, I did not come across any obvious errors, and I believe that the book must have been well edited.
I feel that no reader, regardless of gender or religious beliefs, should avoid reading Surviving the Business of Healthcare. This is a book that will serve you well for life. I recommend it to anyone who is a fan of a healthy lifestyle and good living for themselves and their loved ones.
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Surviving the Business of Healthcare
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