"Rothman's book is an engaging, interesting, and complex one, easy to read, more difficult to evaluate....The episodes are enourmously interesting on their own...Rothman covers the ground other have plowed, but he does so with a craftsman's eye for the compelling detail, the vivid illustration, and the example that supports the message of his tale....Taken as a collection of fascinating tales, this is a book well worth reading by any student of Americanmedicine."--Theodore R. Marmor, Ph.D, The New England Journal of Medicine"Carefully argued and illuminating..."--The New York Review"Rothman's argument is nuanced and historically informed; his writing is clear and straightforward: and his conclusion...is thought-provoking and unsettling."--Annals of Internal Medicine"The major strength of this book is the currency, clinical relevance, and clarity and readability of the text..."--Doody's Journal"There is much to be learned from this book, both in the history of American health care and in Rothman's often trenchant political analysis. In an environment in which policymakers' institutional memory can apparently be measure in months, not years, there is always benefit to being reminded of how we came to arrive at our current circumstances....One can thus take great pleasure-and learn a lot-from Beginnings Count..."--Health Affairs"Rothman's book is an engaging, interesting, and complex one, easy to read, more difficult to evaluate....The episodes are enourmously interesting on their own...Rothman covers the ground other have plowed, but he does so with a craftsman's eye for the compelling detail, the vivid illustration, and the example that supports the message of his tale....Taken as a collection of fascinating tales, this is a book well worth reading by any student of Americanmedicine."--Theodore R. Marmor, Ph.D, The New England Journal of Medicine"Carefully argued and illuminating..."--The New York Review"Rothman's argument is nuanced and historically informed; his writing is clear and straightforward: and his conclusion...is thought-provoking and unsettling."--Annals of Internal Medicine"The major strength of this book is the currency, clinical relevance, and clarity and readability of the text..."--Doody's Journal"There is much to be learned from this book, both in the history of American health care and in Rothman's often trenchant political analysis. In an environment in which policymakers' institutional memory can apparently be measure in months, not years, there is always benefit to being reminded of how we came to arrive at our current circumstances....One can thus take great pleasure-and learn a lot-from Beginnings Count..."--Health AffairsNoted in The Indianapolis Star"...beautifully written....well worth reading"--Medical Humanities Review"...Beginnings Count deserves to be widely read and its implications vigorously debated."--SCIENCE"...Rothman's impassioned analysis of class and medical technology may deservedly win more readers to history than drier, more circumspect tomes."--Medical History"Rothman is most successful in illustrating modern society's preoccuption with medical technology -- the "magic bullets" that help compensate, though not entirely and not equitably, for the life-styles, socioeconomic conditions, and environmental elements that dictate health outcomes. The case studies demonstrate the powerful social bias toward innovation and diffusion of any technology with significant benefits for identifiable individuals."--The Journalof American HistoryNoted in the Journal of Ethics, Law, and Aging