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The House of God

The House of God is a 1978 satirical novel by Samuel Shem (a pseudonym used by psychiatrist Stephen Bergman). The novel follows a group of medical interns at a fictionalized version of Beth Israel Hospital over the course of a year in the early 1970s, focusing on the psychological harm and dehumanization caused by their residency training. The book, described by the New York Times as "raunchy, troubling and hilarious", was viewed as scandalous at the time of its publication, but has since acquired a cult following and is frequently included in the discussion of humanism, ethics, and training in medicine.[1]

The House of God
First edition
AuthorSamuel Shem
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreSatirical novel
PublisherRichard Marek Publishers
Publication date
August 1978
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages429
ISBN0-440-13368-8
OCLC7423035
Preceded byNone 
Followed byMount Misery 

Storyline edit

Dr. Roy Basch is an intelligent but naive former Rhodes Scholar and BMS ("Best Medical School")-educated intern ('tern') working in a hospital called the House of God after having completed his medical studies at BMS. Basch is poorly prepared for the grueling hours and the sudden responsibilities with limited guidance from senior attending physicians. He begins the year on a rotation supervised by an enigmatic and iconoclastic senior resident who goes by the name "The Fat Man". The Fat Man teaches him that the only way to keep patients in good health and to survive psychologically is to break the rules. The Fat Man provides his interns with wisdom such as his own "Laws of the House of God". One of his teachings is that in the House of God, most of the diagnostic procedures, treatments, and medications received by the patients known as "gomers" (see Glossary, below) actually harm these patients instead of helping them. Basch becomes convinced of the accuracy of the Fat Man's advice and begins to follow it. Because he follows the Fat Man's advice and does nothing to the "gomers", they remain in good health. Therefore, his team is recognized as one of the best in the hospital and he is recognized as an excellent intern by everyone even though he is breaking the rules.

Later, the Fat Man must leave for a rotation with another team. Roy is then supervised by a more conventional resident named Jo who—unlike the Fat Man—follows the rules, but unknowingly hurts the "gomers" by doing so. Basch survives the rotation with Jo by claiming to perform numerous tests and treatments on the "gomers" while doing nothing to treat them. These patients again do well, and Basch's reputation as an excellent intern is maintained.

During the course of the novel, working in the hospital takes a psychological toll on Basch. His personality and outlook change, and he has outbursts of temper. He has adulterous trysts with various nurses and social service workers (nicknamed the "Sociable Cervix"), and his relationship with his girlfriend Berry suffers. A colleague, Wayne Potts, commits suicide. Potts had been constantly badgered by the upper hierarchy and haunted by a patient—nicknamed "The Yellow Man" (due to the jaundice from his fulminant necrotic hepatitis)--who goes comatose and eventually (after months) dies possibly because Potts had not put him on steroids. Basch secretly euthanizes a patient called Saul the leukemic tailor, whose illness had gone into remission but was back in the hospital in incredible pain and begging for death. Basch becomes more and more emotionally unstable until his friends force him to attend a mime performance by Marcel Marceau, where he has an experience of catharsis and helps him recover his emotional stability.

By the end of the book, it turns out that the psychiatry resident, Cohen, has inspired most of the year's group of interns—as well as two well-spoken policemen, Gilheeney and Quick—to pursue a career in psychiatry. The terrible year convinces most of the interns to receive psychiatric help themselves. The book ends with Basch and Berry vacationing in France before he begins his psychiatry residency, which is how the book begins as well; the entire book is a flashback. But even while vacationing, bad memories of the House of God haunt Basch. Basch is convinced that he could not have gotten through the year without Berry, and he asks her to marry him.

Characters edit

Staff
Interns and residents
  • Dr. Roy Basch, the protagonist and one of the first-year residents.
  • Dr. Fishberg ("The Fish"), the Chief Resident; wishes to obtain a GI fellowship.
  • Jo, a high-achieving resident who wishes to obtain a cardiology fellowship.
  • "Fats" ("The Fatman"), an unconventional but effective second-year resident; wishes to obtain a GI fellowship.
  • Dr. Chuck Johnston, a black first-year resident from Chicago; Basch's best friend.
  • Dr. Jeff Cohen, the psychiatry resident.
  • "Eat My Dust" Eddie, a first-year resident fixated on winning the Black Crow Award (awarded for most consents for postmortems/postmortems); wishes to pursue oncology.
  • Elihu, "a tall beak-nosed Sephardic Jew with a frizzy Isro-Afro, rumored to be the worst surgical intern in the history of the House".
  • Harry, another first-year resident fixated on winning the Black Crow Award.
  • "Hyper Hooper", a first-year resident who wins the Black Crow Award.
  • Dr. Howard Runtsky (Runt), a first-year resident (intern) who takes Valium for his nerves. Runtsky is a friend of Basch's, having been a classmate of his at BMS. He is described as a "short, stocky product of two red-hot psychoanalysts". Runtsky has sex with one of the nurses and breaks out of his shell; he "[goes] west for a "classic Eastern" psychiatric training program on the "mountain campus" of the University of Wyoming.
  • Dr. Wayne Potts, a first-year resident (intern) from Charleston, South Carolina who is insecure and uncertain. Married to an MBH surgical intern, Potts is described as "a nice guy but depressed, repressed, and kind of compressed, dressed in crisp white, pockets bulging with instruments".
Other doctors
  • Dr. Leggo, the Chief of Medicine who believes in doing everything to save patients.
  • Dr. Gath, a surgeon.
  • Dr. Otto Kreinberg, one of the attending physicians.
  • Dr. Pinkus, a "tall, emaciated-looking staff cardiologist, heading toward forty".
  • Dr. Putzel, a private doctor who has admitting rights.
  • "Grenade Room" Dubler, a former intern/resident.
Other staff
  • Sergeant Finton Gilheeny, a "huge, barrel-shaped" police officer with "red hair growing out of and into most of the slitty features on his fat red face".
  • Officer Quick, a police officer who looks like a "matchstick, decked out, facially, in white of skin and black of hair, with vigilant eyes and a large and worrisome mouth filled with many disparate teeth".
  • Angel, one of the Medical ICU (MICU) nurses, "buxom, Irish, with wraparound muscular thighs and a creamy complexion".
  • Hazel, the head housekeeper who engages in a sexual relationship with Chuck Johnston.
  • Molly, a nurse who engages in a sexual relationship with Roy Basch. Molly described lovemaking as "the feeling of having a centipede walk through wearing gold cleats".
  • Rosalie Cohen, a junior social worker who engages in a sexual relationship with Howard Runtsky.
  • Selma, the head social worker who engages in a sexual relationship with Basch.
  • Lionel, one of the HELP, a "guy in the Blue Blazer" who "help[s] with anything".
Patients
  • Dr. Sanders, the first Black doctor who interned with Dr. Leggo; dies from leukemia.
  • Anna O., a 'gomere' who cries, "ROODLE ROODLE".
  • George Donowitz, a private patient.
  • Ina Goober, a former New Masada resident who cries, "Go avay".
  • Mr. Itzak Rokitansky, a former college professor who had suffered a stroke; visited daily by his sisters, he cries "PURRTY GUD".
  • Rose Katz, a LOL in NAD.
Other
  • Berry, Roy's girlfriend.
  • Levy, a BMS student.

Laws of the House of God edit

The Fat Man's laws
  1. GOMERS don't die.
  2. GOMERS go to ground.
  3. At a cardiac arrest, the first procedure is to take your own pulse.
  4. The patient is the one with the disease.
  5. Placement comes first.
  6. There is no body cavity that cannot be reached with a #14G needle and a good strong arm.
  7. Age + BUN = Lasix dose.
  8. They can always hurt you more.
Roy Basch's further laws
  1. The only good admission is a dead admission.
  2. If you don't take a temperature, you can't find a fever.
  3. Show me a BMS (Best Medical Student, a student at The Best Medical School) who only triples my work and I will kiss his feet.
  4. If the radiology resident and the medical student both see a lesion on the chest x-ray, there can be no lesion there.
  5. The delivery of good medical care is to do as much nothing as possible.

Context and impact edit

The book takes place during the Watergate scandal, and follows such events as the resignation of Spiro T. Agnew and Richard Nixon.

A 2019 short essay by Shem[2] and an accompanying online documentary[3] document the origins of the book and the characters upon which it is based. The story is autobiographical, as the BMS is a thinly veiled Harvard Medical School (commonly called HMS), and The House of God represents the Beth Israel Hospital, now a part of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, one of the HMS-affiliated hospitals in Boston, Massachusetts; "Man's Best Hospital" (MBH) represents Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH).

According to the author, many older physicians were offended by the work.[4] Many of the terms defined in the book (see glossary) have since become widely known and used in medical culture.[1]

The journal Academic Medicine argued The House of God was revolutionary in that it brought to light paradoxical issues of care in modern medicine. Patients (in the book under Putzel) who were not acutely ill could nevertheless be admitted to the hospital and undergo multiple invasive procedures, creating a revenue stream for the hospital but exposing the patient to risk and discomfort, and demoralizing the residents.[5] Reimbursement rules have been changed to prohibit this practice under value-based purchasing (see Pay for performance (healthcare)). JAMA (the Journal of the American Medical Association) has a distinct collection of hundreds of articles titled "Less Is More" that discuss multiple areas of medicine where standard interventions seem to hurt patients.[6] Furthermore, a 2011 essay proposes that the book was an impetus for limiting medical resident work hours.[7]

Glossary edit

Nouns edit

  • Gomer: An acronym meaning "get out of my emergency room". The acronym is used to refer to a patient who is frequently admitted to the hospital with complicated but uninspiring and incurable conditions.
  • LOL in NAD: "Little old lady in no apparent distress". An elderly patient who following a minor fall or illness, would be better served by staying at home with good social support rather than being admitted into a hospital. (Compare "NAD" = "no abnormality detected" or "no apparent distress" (used to record the absence of abnormal signs on examination.)
  • Zebra: A very unlikely diagnosis in which a more common disease is a more likely cause of a patient's symptoms. The term is derived from the common admonition that "if you hear hoof beats, think horses, not zebras".

Verbs edit

  • Buff the charts: To make a patient look well-treated in the charts or medical records without actually providing any treatment.
  • Turf: To find any excuse to refer a patient to a different department or team.
  • Bounce: To return a "turfed" patient to the department that referred him or her.

Cultural references edit

References to life edit

In-jokes abound in the work. One of the principal characters is "Eat My Dust" Eddie, a doctor so-called because of the saying embroidered on his jacket. His name often is abbreviated as EMD, which is also the acronym of the feared, often terminal, cardiac event "electromechanical dissociation" (EMD), otherwise known as pulseless electrical activity (PEA).[citation needed]

References by other works edit

In 1984, The House of God was made into a film. The film was never released in theaters or on VHS/DVD, but was shown on HBO multiple times. It starred Charles Haid as The Fat Man, Tim Matheson as Roy, and featured Bess Armstrong, Ossie Davis, Sandra Bernhard, and Michael Richards in supporting roles.[8][9]

The TV medical sitcom-drama Scrubs features numerous references to The House of God, which was reading material for some of the show's writers.[10][better source needed] "Turfing", "Bouncing" and "Gomers" occasionally feature in the show's dialogue. In the episode "My Balancing Act", Dr. Cox uses the term "zebra". In the episode "My Student", J.D. quotes the medical student rule: "A famous doctor once said, 'Show me a med student that only triples my work, and I'll kiss his feet.'" One episode focuses on Dr. Dorian saving a patient by "doing nothing," which is a major theme of the novel.[citation needed]

Sequel edit

Shem has published three sequels to The House of God: Mount Misery, Man's 4th Best Hospital, and Our Hospital.[11]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Markel, Howard (August 18, 2009). "A Book Doctors Can't Close". The New York Times.
  2. ^ Bergman, Stephen (July 10, 2019). "Basch Unbound—The House of God and Fiction as Resistance at 40". JAMA. 322 (6): 486–487. doi:10.1001/jama.2019.9499. PMID 31290947. S2CID 195873045. Retrieved July 11, 2019.
  3. ^ JAMA Network. "The House of God". YouTube. JAMA Network. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  4. ^ Shem, Samuel (2012-11-28). "Samuel Shem, 34 Years After 'The House of God'". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2013-09-21.
  5. ^ Wear D. The House of God : Another Look. Academic Medicine [serial online]. June 2002;77(6):496-501.
  6. ^ Lagu, Tara (2015-03-01). ""Less Is More" and The House of God: Was the Fat Man Right Again?". JAMA Internal Medicine. 175 (3): 459–460. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2014.8116. ISSN 2168-6114. PMID 25730562.
  7. ^ Brody H. The House of God: Is It Pertinent 30 Years Later? The Virtual Mentor: VM [serial online]. July 1, 2011;13(7):499-502.
  8. ^ "The House of God". Medhum.Med.NYU.edu.
  9. ^ "The House of God (1984) - IMDb". IMDb.
  10. ^ . scrubs.mopnt.com. Archived from the original on 3 April 2008. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
  11. ^ Shem, Samuel (2019). "Man's 4th Best Hospital". JAMA. 322 (18): 1746–1750. doi:10.1001/jama.2019.16384. PMID 31613307. S2CID 204703145. Retrieved 20 April 2020.

Bibliography edit

  • Shem, Samuel (August 30, 1978). The House of God (1st ed.). Richard Marek Publishers. ISBN 978-0399900235.
  • Shem, Samuel (February 18, 1997). Mount Misery (1st ed.). Fawcett. ISBN 978-0449911181.
  • Shem, Samuel. Man's 4th Best Hospital. Berkley. ISBN 978-1984805362. S2CID 204703145.
  • Shem, Samuel. Our Hospital.
  • "Man's 4th Best Hospital". JAMA. 322 (18): 1746–1750. November 12, 2019. doi:10.1001/jama.2019.16384. PMID 31613307.

External links edit

  • Hood R (10 October 1996). "The House of God - 15th Anniversary Review". New England Journal of Medicine. 335 (15): 1165–1166. doi:10.1056/NEJM199610103351521.
  • Boyes K (2004). "Medicine's heretic bible nearly 30 years onward" (PDF). New Zealand Medical Student Journal (1): 39–41.
  • Winter R, Birnberg B (2004). "The Clan of the Cave Bear meets The House of God" (PDF). Fam Med. 36 (2): 95–7. PMID 14872355.

house, this, article, about, novel, religious, uses, term, place, worship, film, based, novel, film, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, cha. This article is about the novel The House of God For religious uses of the term see Place of worship For the film based on the novel see The House of God film This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources The House of God news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message The House of God is a 1978 satirical novel by Samuel Shem a pseudonym used by psychiatrist Stephen Bergman The novel follows a group of medical interns at a fictionalized version of Beth Israel Hospital over the course of a year in the early 1970s focusing on the psychological harm and dehumanization caused by their residency training The book described by the New York Times as raunchy troubling and hilarious was viewed as scandalous at the time of its publication but has since acquired a cult following and is frequently included in the discussion of humanism ethics and training in medicine 1 The House of GodFirst editionAuthorSamuel ShemCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreSatirical novelPublisherRichard Marek PublishersPublication dateAugust 1978Media typePrint Hardback amp Paperback Pages429ISBN0 440 13368 8OCLC7423035Preceded byNone Followed byMount Misery Contents 1 Storyline 2 Characters 3 Laws of the House of God 4 Context and impact 5 Glossary 5 1 Nouns 5 2 Verbs 6 Cultural references 6 1 References to life 6 2 References by other works 7 Sequel 8 Notes 9 Bibliography 10 External linksStoryline editDr Roy Basch is an intelligent but naive former Rhodes Scholar and BMS Best Medical School educated intern tern working in a hospital called the House of God after having completed his medical studies at BMS Basch is poorly prepared for the grueling hours and the sudden responsibilities with limited guidance from senior attending physicians He begins the year on a rotation supervised by an enigmatic and iconoclastic senior resident who goes by the name The Fat Man The Fat Man teaches him that the only way to keep patients in good health and to survive psychologically is to break the rules The Fat Man provides his interns with wisdom such as his own Laws of the House of God One of his teachings is that in the House of God most of the diagnostic procedures treatments and medications received by the patients known as gomers see Glossary below actually harm these patients instead of helping them Basch becomes convinced of the accuracy of the Fat Man s advice and begins to follow it Because he follows the Fat Man s advice and does nothing to the gomers they remain in good health Therefore his team is recognized as one of the best in the hospital and he is recognized as an excellent intern by everyone even though he is breaking the rules Later the Fat Man must leave for a rotation with another team Roy is then supervised by a more conventional resident named Jo who unlike the Fat Man follows the rules but unknowingly hurts the gomers by doing so Basch survives the rotation with Jo by claiming to perform numerous tests and treatments on the gomers while doing nothing to treat them These patients again do well and Basch s reputation as an excellent intern is maintained During the course of the novel working in the hospital takes a psychological toll on Basch His personality and outlook change and he has outbursts of temper He has adulterous trysts with various nurses and social service workers nicknamed the Sociable Cervix and his relationship with his girlfriend Berry suffers A colleague Wayne Potts commits suicide Potts had been constantly badgered by the upper hierarchy and haunted by a patient nicknamed The Yellow Man due to the jaundice from his fulminant necrotic hepatitis who goes comatose and eventually after months dies possibly because Potts had not put him on steroids Basch secretly euthanizes a patient called Saul the leukemic tailor whose illness had gone into remission but was back in the hospital in incredible pain and begging for death Basch becomes more and more emotionally unstable until his friends force him to attend a mime performance by Marcel Marceau where he has an experience of catharsis and helps him recover his emotional stability By the end of the book it turns out that the psychiatry resident Cohen has inspired most of the year s group of interns as well as two well spoken policemen Gilheeney and Quick to pursue a career in psychiatry The terrible year convinces most of the interns to receive psychiatric help themselves The book ends with Basch and Berry vacationing in France before he begins his psychiatry residency which is how the book begins as well the entire book is a flashback But even while vacationing bad memories of the House of God haunt Basch Basch is convinced that he could not have gotten through the year without Berry and he asks her to marry him Characters editStaff Interns and residents dd Dr Roy Basch the protagonist and one of the first year residents Dr Fishberg The Fish the Chief Resident wishes to obtain a GI fellowship Jo a high achieving resident who wishes to obtain a cardiology fellowship Fats The Fatman an unconventional but effective second year resident wishes to obtain a GI fellowship Dr Chuck Johnston a black first year resident from Chicago Basch s best friend Dr Jeff Cohen the psychiatry resident Eat My Dust Eddie a first year resident fixated on winning the Black Crow Award awarded for most consents for postmortems postmortems wishes to pursue oncology Elihu a tall beak nosed Sephardic Jew with a frizzy Isro Afro rumored to be the worst surgical intern in the history of the House Harry another first year resident fixated on winning the Black Crow Award Hyper Hooper a first year resident who wins the Black Crow Award Dr Howard Runtsky Runt a first year resident intern who takes Valium for his nerves Runtsky is a friend of Basch s having been a classmate of his at BMS He is described as a short stocky product of two red hot psychoanalysts Runtsky has sex with one of the nurses and breaks out of his shell he goes west for a classic Eastern psychiatric training program on the mountain campus of the University of Wyoming Dr Wayne Potts a first year resident intern from Charleston South Carolina who is insecure and uncertain Married to an MBH surgical intern Potts is described as a nice guy but depressed repressed and kind of compressed dressed in crisp white pockets bulging with instruments Other doctors dd Dr Leggo the Chief of Medicine who believes in doing everything to save patients Dr Gath a surgeon Dr Otto Kreinberg one of the attending physicians Dr Pinkus a tall emaciated looking staff cardiologist heading toward forty Dr Putzel a private doctor who has admitting rights Grenade Room Dubler a former intern resident Other staff dd Sergeant Finton Gilheeny a huge barrel shaped police officer with red hair growing out of and into most of the slitty features on his fat red face Officer Quick a police officer who looks like a matchstick decked out facially in white of skin and black of hair with vigilant eyes and a large and worrisome mouth filled with many disparate teeth Angel one of the Medical ICU MICU nurses buxom Irish with wraparound muscular thighs and a creamy complexion Hazel the head housekeeper who engages in a sexual relationship with Chuck Johnston Molly a nurse who engages in a sexual relationship with Roy Basch Molly described lovemaking as the feeling of having a centipede walk through wearing gold cleats Rosalie Cohen a junior social worker who engages in a sexual relationship with Howard Runtsky Selma the head social worker who engages in a sexual relationship with Basch Lionel one of the HELP a guy in the Blue Blazer who help s with anything Patients Dr Sanders the first Black doctor who interned with Dr Leggo dies from leukemia Anna O a gomere who cries ROODLE ROODLE George Donowitz a private patient Ina Goober a former New Masada resident who cries Go avay Mr Itzak Rokitansky a former college professor who had suffered a stroke visited daily by his sisters he cries PURRTY GUD Rose Katz a LOL in NAD Other Berry Roy s girlfriend Levy a BMS student Laws of the House of God editThe Fat Man s laws GOMERS don t die GOMERS go to ground At a cardiac arrest the first procedure is to take your own pulse The patient is the one with the disease Placement comes first There is no body cavity that cannot be reached with a 14G needle and a good strong arm Age BUN Lasix dose They can always hurt you more Roy Basch s further laws The only good admission is a dead admission If you don t take a temperature you can t find a fever Show me a BMS Best Medical Student a student at The Best Medical School who only triples my work and I will kiss his feet If the radiology resident and the medical student both see a lesion on the chest x ray there can be no lesion there The delivery of good medical care is to do as much nothing as possible Context and impact editThe book takes place during the Watergate scandal and follows such events as the resignation of Spiro T Agnew and Richard Nixon A 2019 short essay by Shem 2 and an accompanying online documentary 3 document the origins of the book and the characters upon which it is based The story is autobiographical as the BMS is a thinly veiled Harvard Medical School commonly called HMS and The House of God represents the Beth Israel Hospital now a part of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center one of the HMS affiliated hospitals in Boston Massachusetts Man s Best Hospital MBH represents Massachusetts General Hospital MGH According to the author many older physicians were offended by the work 4 Many of the terms defined in the book see glossary have since become widely known and used in medical culture 1 The journal Academic Medicine argued The House of God was revolutionary in that it brought to light paradoxical issues of care in modern medicine Patients in the book under Putzel who were not acutely ill could nevertheless be admitted to the hospital and undergo multiple invasive procedures creating a revenue stream for the hospital but exposing the patient to risk and discomfort and demoralizing the residents 5 Reimbursement rules have been changed to prohibit this practice under value based purchasing see Pay for performance healthcare JAMA the Journal of the American Medical Association has a distinct collection of hundreds of articles titled Less Is More that discuss multiple areas of medicine where standard interventions seem to hurt patients 6 Furthermore a 2011 essay proposes that the book was an impetus for limiting medical resident work hours 7 Glossary editNouns edit Gomer An acronym meaning get out of my emergency room The acronym is used to refer to a patient who is frequently admitted to the hospital with complicated but uninspiring and incurable conditions LOL in NAD Little old lady in no apparent distress An elderly patient who following a minor fall or illness would be better served by staying at home with good social support rather than being admitted into a hospital Compare NAD no abnormality detected or no apparent distress used to record the absence of abnormal signs on examination Zebra A very unlikely diagnosis in which a more common disease is a more likely cause of a patient s symptoms The term is derived from the common admonition that if you hear hoof beats think horses not zebras Verbs edit Buff the charts To make a patient look well treated in the charts or medical records without actually providing any treatment Turf To find any excuse to refer a patient to a different department or team Bounce To return a turfed patient to the department that referred him or her Cultural references editReferences to life edit In jokes abound in the work One of the principal characters is Eat My Dust Eddie a doctor so called because of the saying embroidered on his jacket His name often is abbreviated as EMD which is also the acronym of the feared often terminal cardiac event electromechanical dissociation EMD otherwise known as pulseless electrical activity PEA citation needed References by other works edit In 1984 The House of God was made into a film The film was never released in theaters or on VHS DVD but was shown on HBO multiple times It starred Charles Haid as The Fat Man Tim Matheson as Roy and featured Bess Armstrong Ossie Davis Sandra Bernhard and Michael Richards in supporting roles 8 9 The TV medical sitcom drama Scrubs features numerous references to The House of God which was reading material for some of the show s writers 10 better source needed Turfing Bouncing and Gomers occasionally feature in the show s dialogue In the episode My Balancing Act Dr Cox uses the term zebra In the episode My Student J D quotes the medical student rule A famous doctor once said Show me a med student that only triples my work and I ll kiss his feet One episode focuses on Dr Dorian saving a patient by doing nothing which is a major theme of the novel citation needed Sequel editShem has published three sequels to The House of God Mount Misery Man s 4th Best Hospital and Our Hospital 11 Notes edit a b Markel Howard August 18 2009 A Book Doctors Can t Close The New York Times Bergman Stephen July 10 2019 Basch Unbound The House of God and Fiction as Resistance at 40 JAMA 322 6 486 487 doi 10 1001 jama 2019 9499 PMID 31290947 S2CID 195873045 Retrieved July 11 2019 JAMA Network The House of God YouTube JAMA Network Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Retrieved 11 July 2019 Shem Samuel 2012 11 28 Samuel Shem 34 Years After The House of God The Atlantic Retrieved 2013 09 21 Wear D The House of God Another Look Academic Medicine serial online June 2002 77 6 496 501 Lagu Tara 2015 03 01 Less Is More and The House of God Was the Fat Man Right Again JAMA Internal Medicine 175 3 459 460 doi 10 1001 jamainternmed 2014 8116 ISSN 2168 6114 PMID 25730562 Brody H The House of God Is It Pertinent 30 Years Later The Virtual Mentor VM serial online July 1 2011 13 7 499 502 The House of God Medhum Med NYU edu The House of God 1984 IMDb IMDb Scrubs faqs My Own Personal Net Thing Scrubs mopnt com scrubs mopnt com Archived from the original on 3 April 2008 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Shem Samuel 2019 Man s 4th Best Hospital JAMA 322 18 1746 1750 doi 10 1001 jama 2019 16384 PMID 31613307 S2CID 204703145 Retrieved 20 April 2020 Bibliography editShem Samuel August 30 1978 The House of God 1st ed Richard Marek Publishers ISBN 978 0399900235 Shem Samuel February 18 1997 Mount Misery 1st ed Fawcett ISBN 978 0449911181 Shem Samuel Man s 4th Best Hospital Berkley ISBN 978 1984805362 S2CID 204703145 Shem Samuel Our Hospital Man s 4th Best Hospital JAMA 322 18 1746 1750 November 12 2019 doi 10 1001 jama 2019 16384 PMID 31613307 External links editHood R 10 October 1996 The House of God 15th Anniversary Review New England Journal of Medicine 335 15 1165 1166 doi 10 1056 NEJM199610103351521 Boyes K 2004 Medicine s heretic bible nearly 30 years onward PDF New Zealand Medical Student Journal 1 39 41 Winter R Birnberg B 2004 The Clan of the Cave Bear meets The House of God PDF Fam Med 36 2 95 7 PMID 14872355 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The House of God amp oldid 1202848320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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