The Literary Examiner

Sep 08, 2014 at 04:20 pm by steve


Shocked: Adventures in Bringing Back the Recently Dead

by David Casarett, M.D.; c.2014, Current; $27.95; 260 pages

The good guy always has decent aim.

Even in the worst kind of shoot-out, Our Hero always manages to nail the bad guy, who clutches his chest, falls without hitting his head, gasps, and flutters his eyelids before shutting them. Fingers go limp, cue the credits.

Television aside, you know that death isn’t that neat. It’s messy and chaotic, and in the new book Shocked: Adventures in Bringing Back the Recently Dead by David Casarett, MD, you’ll see that that’s a very good thing.

Back when he was in medical school, Casarett had a patient he’ll never forget: the man he calls “Joe” had a “massive heart attack” and died, but the resuscitation team brought him back to life. Joe didn’t fare well – Casarett questioned his own quickness in calling code - and, because this happened some time after a two-year-old had famously been successfully resuscitated after dying, Casarett wondered why the outcomes weren’t the same.

Now, as a hospice doctor, Casarett knows why: lifesaving technology “can’t make a patient young and healthy. Neither can it cure the other maladies that come with age.” That doesn’t stop medical science from trying to re-start the life of someone who’s died – but where is the edge of the envelope being pushed?

CPR and mouth-to-mouth resuscitation go back decades, if not centuries. Also back then, tying a body to a horse and jogging around a park was a recommended method of revival. That worked, as Casarett learned, but it was only a partial success. Other methods included blowing smoke into a victim’s orifices (volunteers? anyone?) and immersion in warm water.

Much of this, of course, has to do with a person’s heart, as Casarett learned on a tour of a monster-sized plastic organ. But it also depends on the methods of revival, as he saw in a high-tech dummy in a state-of-the-art training ER. It has to do with the way someone has died, their mitochondria, how quickly (or if) the body was chilled, economics, and the proximity of lifesaving equipment. Squirrels might have answers for us. Long-term dry-ice storage via cryogenics, Casarett believes, will not.

But any way you look at it, technological advances mean that death isn’t what it used to be.

So you say that expiration is no laughing matter? It is when you’re reading Shocked. This book could turn any spectre of death into the Grin Reaper.

With a keenly-honed sense of true curiosity and a killer wit, author David Casarett gamely goes from mortuary to museum and back, to look deeply at how “dead” is maybe not really dead these days. In doing so, he melds old-school myth with modern technology to see why lives are saved (or not), and his irreverent comments and hilarious observances give the title of his book a wicked double meaning.

Death is a trip we’ll all take, and some of us will be lucky enough to return with minimal souvenirs. If you’re ready to laugh in the face of that, then reading Shocked should be your aim.




March 2024

Mar 20, 2024 at 11:19 am by kbarrettalley

Your March 2024 Issue of Birmingham Medical News is Here!