HEALING PEOPLE, NOT PATIENTS- a book review

A couple of months into medical school, Dr. Weinkle interviewed a distressed patient in acute alcohol withdrawal. He tried to develop empathy for the man as he unraveled his long history of alcohol abuse and explored his reasons for trying to quit. However,as he proceeded to examine the patient, his empathy evaporated when the man rolled up his sleeve for a blood pressure check- revealing a huge tattoo of a Nazi swastika.

a beautiful rainbow across the sky in a forest

Creating Authentic Relationships in Modern Healthcare.

This post has been updated October 2020.

In HEALING PEOPLE,NOT PATIENTS Dr. Weinkle describes ways he believes the current healthcare system in our country  fails to meet the needs of both patients and physicians. Reading it, I thought of a television medical drama in which a determined, idealistic young doctor fights a bureaucratic system to care for  disenfranchised patients. Critics call the show unrealistic, but if they read Dr. Weinkle’s book, they may decide it’s not so far fetched.

The author,  Jonathan Weinkle, M.D. , FAAP

Dr. Weinkle practices primary care medicine at Squirrel Hill Health Center, a federally qualified health clinic in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania. He  serves as Clinical Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Family Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh, where he also attended medical school. He lives with his wife and three sons.

Dr. Weinkle contacted me after reading  my review of a book by Dr. Danielle Ofri. He asked if I would consider reading and reviewing his book also.  I agreed, and he provided a complimentary PDF copy.

Pitchwerks podcast - #115:Dr. Jonathan Weinkle
Dr. Weinkle’s podcast

That was 2 years ago. Little did we know or imagine how different medicine, and everything else in our world would be by late 2020. In a blog post, Dr. Weinkle reflected on how the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has changed his approach to his medical practice and to his faith.

Two years ago that doctor (himself) had just published a new book about listening to people, finding the person within the patient, and overcoming systems and stigmata to provide them with kind, respectful, compassionate and excellent care.  That doctor had no idea that over the next two years, the world would fall apart again, and again, and again.  That doctor has changed, because he is exhausted.

Unfortunately, that’s how most of the world is feeling these days, and how a lot of the people I care for feel much of the time.  Shocked and confused.  “Why me?”  God created a universe, and it is going to pieces around me.  God gave me a body and it’s going to pieces on me.

Dr. Weinkle


Why our healthcare system is broken

In the book, he identifies the EHR -electronic health record, as part of the problem, because it doesn’t allow him to express himself the way he would like. He prefers to


open a patient’s (paper) chart,(so it) tells me a story about the patient much like he might tell himself, almost as if I am reading a medical memoir

Although he calls this book  a “how to”- how to restore the sacredness of the doctor-patient relationship– it also  reads like the “medical memoir” he prefers for a patient. It’s his memoir, a telling of his journey from a  medical student entering the “adventure” of medicine to a graduate physician who believes


“Practicing medicine is a privilege, a gift- a sacred trust.

He illustrates several issues plaguing modern medicine using anecdotes about patients from his practice (with details changed to preserve privacy and confidentiality). Our current medical system sabotages   healing by

  • Fractured communication
  • Muddled priorities, where paper work takes precedence over patients
  • Procedures valued over counselling
  • Volume incentivized over value
  • Turning humans in pain into consumers, “as if they were buying televisions”

A turning point and lesson learned

A couple of months into medical school, Dr. Weinkle interviewed a distressed patient in acute alcohol withdrawal. He tried to develop empathy for the man as he unraveled  his long history of alcohol abuse and explored his reasons for trying to quit.

However,as he proceeded to examine the patient, his empathy evaporated when the man rolled up his sleeve for a blood pressure check- revealing a huge tattoo of a Nazi swastika.

Dr. Weinkle is Jewish.


“I am not a vindictive person, but all I could think was, “Well, it serves him right. This is poetic justice.”

He excused himself, never telling his preceptor how ill it (the tattoo)  made him feel, or the malicious thoughts it triggered in his mind.

In HEALING PEOPLE, NOT PATIENTS, Dr. Weinkle explains how he learned to change those kinds of encounters into ones with


Open, honest communication, mutual respect, and shared purpose, even when systemic problems push them into adversarial positions.

But it’s not easy.


even when everyone has the best of intentions,
building a covenantal relationship in the current healthcare system is about as easy as
building a house on the Carolina coast and not having it destroyed by a hurricane.

a male doctor talking to a middle aged woman
Photo by Dr. Weinkle’s son, used by permission

How to fix our healthcare system

One way he makes it happen is by working in a Federally Qualified Health Center, FQHC.

A FQHC is the closest thing we in the U.S. have to “socialized medicine.” Dr. Weinkle has worked in one for 10 years. As he describes it, in a FQHC

Anyone who is a stranger to the healthcare system, who has to clear high barriers in order to access care, should be welcomed in and have help knocking down those barriers.

Most doctors  concentrate on helping patients manage acute and chronic disease and try to address the major causes of disease and death -smoking, poor eating, lack of exercise, stress, sleep deprivation, substance use, and obesity. But doctors like Dr. Weinkle tackle other challenges , the “social determinants” of health. These include

  • Inadequate houses or homelessness
  • Lack of reliable transportatin
  • Unsafe neighborhoods
  • Food Deserts, where healthy food is unavailable
  • Language, ethnic, or cultural differences
  • Discrimination and/or exclusion
  • Unemployment, low wages, and/or poverty
  • Limited education and/or education opportunity

His patient panel consists of people who are

  • Refugees, who often speak little or no English
  • Members of ethnic minorities, including African Americans and Hispanics
  • LGBTQ persons
  • People who are mentally ill and/or developmentally challenged
  • People with stigmatizing illnesses, such as HIV/AIDS
  • People with substance abuse
  • People who have been incarcerated


Dr. Weinkle feels at home taking care of them because

“I come from a long line of people who have been strangers in a long line of places. We are supposed to understand how it feels to be shut out, demonized, misunderstood, or simply ignored.”

Since I finished residency many years ago,  I have had limited experience treating these types of patients, but enough that I understand the challenge, frustration, and sometimes satisfaction of doing so. Non medical professionals may be surprised by Dr. Weinkle’s descriptions of dealing with patients who are often unable or unwilling to cooperate with even basic healthcare steps.  

American medical care has transformed in the past 50 years but most of us wish it still worked like in the “good old days. As Dr. Weinkle describes it


most doctors were solo practitioners who did everything, and a patient, especially in a smaller town, could expect care that felt like home.
Continuity throughout their life… and accompanying them through
old age.
Presence wherever and whenever it was needed, in the middle of the night,

Unfortunately, medicine in the 21st century doesn’t look like that because


There are too many different kinds of care,… and too many demands on a doctor’s time to enable this kind of practice ..


Hospital privileges, insurance credentialing,

and the simple fact that doctors have belatedly learned that we can’t work 168-hour weeks and maintain our own health and family relationships

prevent us from being like our favorite docs of yesteryear.

Dr. Weinkle’s practice uses the concept of a “medical home”, often called the patient centered medical home, PCMH, which many medical offices are adopting, not just FQHC. But it is especially important with patient groups like the ones he and his colleagues care for.

(The concept of PCMH is explained here Defining the PCMH )

He takes it one step further, writing we need more than medical homes, we need medical communities, where doctors work closely with their local hospitals, ERs, pharmacies, and schools to address patients’ needs.

a male doctor examining a smiling baby girl
Dr. Weinkle’s baby girl patient seems to be enjoying her visit. Photo by the girl’s father, used here by permission. When posted on Facebook, this photo received 4000 likes in one week.

The solution- covenant health care

In HEALING PEOPLE, NOT PATIENTS Dr. Wrinkle argues for creating authentic relationships in modern healthcare by  

Promoting health behavior change without insulting or scaring patients, by learning what obstacles they face and helping to resolve them

Honesty about disease outcomes, especially at the end of life; avoiding futile care, and recognizing that sometimes death is not a complication but is the ultimate outcome of some illnesses

“Activated patients”  determined to get better,  to do something about their illnesses, becoming experts on their diagnoses

Doctors and patients valuing and respecting each other’s time and knowledge

Cutting waste- eliminating those things we do in healthcare that don’t add value to care, making it safer or more effective; bureaucratic policies, procedures, and rules that waste both time and money, like prior authorizations, “utilization review”, and 15 minute appointments

Medical education that includes teaching interpersonal skills, with learning objectives given as much importance and time as other medical skills,

Ultimately, Dr. Weinkle wants to see medical care return to being


meetings between two human beings, together forming a covenant to achieve healing

That concept is partially born out of Dr. Weinkle’s Jewish roots discussed in the Appendix- Being a Nice Jewish Doctor

“God forms a covenant—many covenants, actually, sealing the promises with symbols like rainbows (Genesis 9:13), circumcision (Genesis 17:10), and stone tablets engraved with the law (Exodus 24:12).

Image from Lightstock.com, stock photo site, affiliate link

The essence of the Jewish faith, the place where a Jew’s worth as a person is tested most thoroughly, is in the relationship with God—and the parallel relationship with other human beings made in God’s image. ”  

What he sees beyond COVID-19

In the blog post I referenced earlier, Dr. Weinkle sees hope there too.

Two years ago, I approached… from the view that wholeness, completeness, was our natural state,…  I believe the opposite now – the world began as chaos, as shock and confusion.  The miracle of the universe is that anything beyond that even exists – anything we have is a gift.  The comfort I take is that the one thing older …, the thing that hovered over even the unformed universe, was the rucha d’rachamin, divine mercy, and it shines light even before anyone has “let there be light.”

Dr. Weinkle


Why you should read HEALING PEOPLE

Health care professionals will find Dr. Weinkle’s concepts an attractive alternative to “burnout”, an encouragement to remember why we entered the profession in the first place, and a challenge to restore the personal touch that makes medicine truly an art.

Patients will find explanations about why medical care is at times fragmented, uncoordinated, and unproductive, will understand the challenge that their own physicians face in providing effective care, and understand how they can be part of the solution.


The book concludes with  an extensive list of Notes listing the references used in each chapter and an exhaustive list of References and Suggested Readings, a few of which I will include below.

Here is a link to Dr. Weinkle’s website where you can read excerpts from the book and find a link to his blog post Winds of Mercy

Healers Who Listen

An unexpected connection

You may recognize Dr. Weinkle’s practice location as one that made headline news a few years ago.

a building with sign-Squirrel Hill Health Center

Squirrel Hill is considered a historic center for Jewish life in Pittsburgh. It is home to more than a quarter of Jewish households in the Pittsburgh-area, according to a Brandeis University study of the Greater Pittsburgh Jewish community.

This is also the Pittsburgh  neighborhood where a gunman walked into the Tree of Life Synagogue and opened fire, killing 11 people on October 27, 2018.

I had only exchanged one email with Dr. Weinkle so it wasn’t until a few days later that I made the connection. I wrote to him and was relieved to learn he was safe.  He had attended a Bat Mitzvah there just the week before the attack. Some of the victims were friends and colleagues.

More of that story is at this link.

Squirrel Hill Mourns

Suggested resources

Here are a few of Dr. Weinkle’s recommendations; please note these are affiliate links which help me fund this blog.

sharing the HEART of Healing People, Not Patients

Thanks for joining me to meet Dr. Weinkle and review his book.

Dr. Aletha

Author: Aletha Cress Oglesby, M.D.

As a family physician, I explore the HEART of HEALTH in my work, recreation, community, and through writing. My blog, Watercress Words, informs and inspires us to live in health. I believe we can turn our health challenges into healthy opportunities. When we do, we can share the HEART of health with our families, communities, and the world. Come explore and share with me.

10 thoughts on “HEALING PEOPLE, NOT PATIENTS- a book review”

  1. Dee, I saw that story also. The one I read said the drug has only been tested in mice, so even if promising it’s a long way from ready for humans. The word “cure” is powerful and emotional-like “get rich quick”. There is much promising research, most of which we don’t hear about for this very reason. So I agree skepticism is wise while also keeping an open mind. Once upon a time, we didn’t have antibiotics. Then one day someone found mold on a petri dish and penicillin became a miracle drug. Now we take antibiotics for granted. Maybe someday we will do the same for cancer therapies.

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  2. Health care is so frustrating right now. I’m so glad there are people like this working towards solutions. Thanks for sharing this at Booknificent Thursday at Mommynificent.com!
    Tina

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  3. Healthcare is alive but ailing ; fortunately many people are working hard to not only fix but improve it. I don’t think the blame lies with any one group or entity, it all works together, so it all has to change in a positive way. We know what we need and want in healthcare but paying for it and delivering it efficiently and fairly are the challenges.
    I’m not certain, but from the context I think the alcoholic patient was an adult old enough to know what his tattoo meant and it is sad that Dr. Weinkle’s response was probably what the man intended to provoke. My compliments to him for not responding in a way that would have validated the man’s attitude.
    But I agree that there probably are some young persons who don’t understand what the symbol stands for, which means we aren’t doing a good job of teaching history. As the saying goes, if we do not learn from history we are bound to repeat it. Symbols do change meaning in context and it’s important to be sensitive to what emotions and actions they might provoke, even unwittingly.
    Thanks for the thought provoking comment Dee.

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    1. Thanks Dee for your concern. Anything we put into our bodies can be toxic if used incorrectly; for example, it’s possible to overdose on water. The challenge is knowing when the benefit of using potent substances to treat a condition is worth the risk. Sometimes it’s better not to use any drug at all, natural or synthetic.

      It is vital to have a process in place to ensure the safety and efficacy of treatments, whether natural or synthetic. Even “natural” products require some sort of processing or packaging that might effect quality and safety.

      Cancer treatments are particularly challenging because we now know that not all cancers progress and become life threatening. Some of them may not need aggressive treatment. Also, some of the newer treatments are harnessing the power of one’s own immune system to fight cancers “naturally”. So progress is being made.

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