An extraordinarily nuanced and sensitive anthropological treatment of the experience of the vulnerable and those who care for them in a universal health care system that has been widely regarded as a model for the industrializing world." - Joseph Harris, Boston University"Based on impressive ethnographic research that considers the perspectives of both patients and health care providers, this book provides a compelling account of how the country's ambitious universal health care program is actually working out on the ground." - Nancy Eberhardt, Knox College