Theresa Brown’s new memoir 

Healing: When a Nurse Becomes a Patient

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When an oncology nurse is diagnosed with cancer, she has to confront the most critical, terrified, and angry patient she’s ever encountered: herself.

New York Times bestselling author Theresa Brown tells a poignant, powerful, and intensely personal story about breast cancer in Healing. She brings us along with her from the mammogram that would change her life through her diagnosis, treatment, and recovery. Despite her training and years of experience as an oncology and hospice nurse, she finds herself continually surprised by the lack of compassion in the medical maze—just as so many of us have. Why is she expected to wait over a long weekend to hear the results of her cancer tests if they are ready? Why is she so often left in the dark about procedures and treatments? Where is the empathy from caregivers? At times she’s mad at herself for not speaking up and asking for what she needs but knows that anyone labeled a “difficult” patient risks getting worse care.

As she did in her book The Shift, Brown draws us into her work with the unforgettable details of her daily life—the needles, the chemo drugs, the rubber gloves, the frustrated patients—but from her new perch as a patient, she also takes a look back with rare candor at some of her own cases as a nurse and considers what she didn’t know then and what she could have done better. A must-read for all of us who have tried to find healing through our health-care system.


“Healing is a stunning book that helped me understand how to survive a serious illness and how to understand hospitals in general. Theresa Brown, RN, is also a hell of a good writer.” — James Patterson

“Deeply moving.” — Damon Tweedy, New York Times bestselling author of Black Man in a White Coat

“A smart, moving, clear-eyed, yet ultimately hopeful jewel of a read on health and care from one of the most thoughtful healthcare writers I know.” — Pauline W. Chen, MD, bestselling author of Final Exam: A Surgeon’s Reflections on Mortality

 

Theresa Brown

Nurse, Writer, and NY Times Bestselling Author of The Shift

 

Recent Columns & News

Opinion: Private Equity and the Corruption of Care
Cancer Nursing Today
July 2024

I’ve heard the term “private equity” applied to health care many times without really understanding what it meant. This is the second of three columns on the economics of health care (see the first column here), and I’m focusing on private equity because those companies tend to view health care as purely a business like any other, rather than a social good serving the public interest that is also a business.

Read More.

Who Broke American Health Care?
Cancer Nursing Today
June 2024

Most nurses learn nothing in school about the internal workings of our health care system. One nursing school dean told me that they save that information for master’s level classes. But the majority of nurses never pursue further education and so miss out on understanding the complexity of health care financing and why the value of caring in health care has become subordinate to the value of making money.

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All the Ways Nurses Make the World
American Journal of Nursing
May 2024

A testament to the evolutionary power of nursing

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About Theresa

Theresa Brown_2.jpg

Theresa Brown, PhD, BSN, RN, is a nurse and writer who lives in Pittsburgh. Her third book —Healing: When a Nurse Becomes a Patient — was published April 2022 and is available wherever books are sold. It explores her diagnosis of and treatment for breast cancer in the context of her own nursing work. Her book, The Shift: One Nurse, Twelve Hours, Four Patients' Lives, was a New York Times Bestseller.

Theresa has been a frequent contributor to the New York Times and her writing has appeared on CNN.com, and in The American Journal of Nursing, The Journal of the American Medical Association, and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Theresa has been a guest on MSNBC Live and NPR’s Fresh Air. Critical Care: A New Nurse Faces Death, Life, and Everything in Between is her first book. It chronicles her initial year of nursing and has been adopted as a textbook in Schools of Nursing across the country.

Theresa's BSN is from the University of Pittsburgh, and during what she calls her past life she received a PhD in English from the University of Chicago. She lectures nationally and internationally on issues related to nursing, health care, and end of life. Becoming a mom led Theresa to leave academia and pursue nursing. It is a career change she has never regretted.

Available Now

Healing: When a Nurse Becomes a Patient

As an oncology and hospice nurse, I thought I knew cancer—knew it. But when I was diagnosed with cancer myself, I realized I knew nothing at all about being a cancer patient: how terrifying having cancer is, and how lonely. Healing: When a Nurse Becomes a Patient traces the intersection of my nurse-self and my patient-self, from breast cancer diagnosis through treatment and after, when I return to work in home hospice. What did Theresa-the-nurse learn from Theresa-the-patient? That we want and need compassion from our health care. Medicine can cure, but healing requires more: thoughtfulness, listening, and a genuine and generous focus on every patient.

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Books by Theresa