
From the reviews:
“This monograph challenges the critical care community to evaluate the technical, moral, and financial limits of critical care. … Trainees, policy makers, and medical practitioners are an appropriate audience for this book, which features international perspectives on critical care resource utilization. … This book effectively frames the question of resource limitation and offers a short list of strategies to address this concern in the future.” (David J. Dries, Doody's Book Reviews, April, 2013)
“Simply compelling! … dynamic, balanced, and stimulating … challenges readers to question 'how things are done' and 'how things should be done' in the ever changing financial and ethical world of the ICU. … not only a must read for ICU clinicians of all disciplines but also for health economists, health policy makers, ethicists and even the lay public.” (Richard J. Brilli, Critical Care Medicine, Vol. 41 (4), April, 2013)
“It would appeal to individuals with an interest in the different systems of health care delivery, particularly from a global perspective. This book would also serve as an excellent foundation for anyone researching various care models throughout the globe. … intensive care physicians who wrestle daily with questions on how to deliver care in a system with limited resources and ever expanding patient expectations will take great interest in this book.” (Donald Griesdale, Canadian Journal of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d'anesthésie, Vol. 60, 2013)