"
Random Acts of Medicine is my favorite kind of book: smart, entertaining, and full of surprises. The field of medicine has been slow to appreciate the immense power of natural experiments. Jena and Worsham are on a crusade to change that. Read this book, and you'll be a believer."
--
Steven D. Levitt, #1
New York Times bestselling co-author of
Freakonomics "What a brilliant book!
Random Acts of Medicine is science, but it is much more than that. It offers a set of profound lessons about learning, life, and health."
--
Cass R. Sunstein,
New York Times bestselling co-author of
Nudge and
Noise "Jena and Worsham are the Freakonomicists of the medical realm... [They] are serious researchers who skillfully navigate the world of medicine and natural experiments.
Random Acts of Medicine follows the successful formula of popular-science authors like Malcolm Gladwell, Stephen Dubner and Steven Levitt, and Emily Oster, combining relatable human stories, statistical exploration and scientific explanations. But don't be fooled by the fun read;
Random Acts of Medicine shows that the ingenious use of natural experiments can improve medicine and save lives."
--
Wall Street Journal "It is a rare book that manages to be both fantastically entertaining and deeply thought-provoking. This is such a book."
--
Emily Oster,
New York Times bestselling author of
The Family Firm,
Cribsheet, and
Expecting Better "
Random Acts of Medicine accomplishes the rare feat of delivering important science in page-turning fashion. There's something fascinating on every page. You'll never think about healthcare quite the same way again."
--
David Epstein,
New York Times bestselling author of
Range and
The Sports Gene "This is a wonderful book for anyone with a curious mind.
Random Acts of Medicine will dazzle you as it reveals ingenious ways that data sleuths have answered questions that can improve your health and health care. Stimulating, creative, and smart, this book is a treasure."
--
Katy Milkman, bestselling author of
How to Change "A charming and informative look at the role of randomness in patients' and doctors' lives--and how natural experiments can turn this randomness into fascinating insights."
--
Joshua Angrist, winner of the 2021 Nobel Prize in economics
"Revealing... Though their tone is occasionally lighthearted, [Jena] and Worsham repeatedly drive home a serious point: The American health care system is failing to deliver optimal care, often due to the unquestioned assumptions and inherent biases of its providers. If this provocative book can spark conversations about how to examine these persistent problems with fresh eyes, its authors have accomplished something truly important."
--
BookPage "Ingenious. . . [Full of] intriguing and surprising facts and trends. . . A well-documented, unnerving, fascinating study for anyone adrift in the American health care system."
--Kirkus Reviews (starred review)