National Resource Center for Academic Detailing [NaRCAD]
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  • Who We Are
    • WHY WE MATTER
    • Our Team
    • Internship Program
    • Testimonials
    • Contact Us
  • LEARNING COURSES
    • Training Series
    • SKILLS LAB
    • ON-DEMAND WEBCASTS
    • Virtual Coaching Sessions
  • Tools
    • Program Planning Hub
    • AD How-To Guides
    • AD Core Toolkits >
      • Inclusivity Toolkit
      • Evaluation Toolkit
      • Opioid Safety Toolkit
      • HIV Prevention Toolkit
      • E-Detailing Toolkit
  • Community
    • COMMUNITY CHECK-INS
    • Peer Connection Program
    • Detailing Community
  • EVENTS
    • CONFERENCE SERIES
    • Present at NaRCAD2025
    • THE CONFERENCE HUB
    • AD Summit Series
    • The AD Summit Hub
  • MEDIA CENTER
    • The Details Blog
    • Podcast Series
    • e-newsletter
    • AD Literature Archives
    • Virtual Bookshelf

Virtual Bookshelf

We select books related to public health, marginalized communities, and ​the experiences of clinicians,
​all of which connects back to the interactive strategy of academic detailing for better patient care.
Are you an avid reader? Have a book you want to share? Use the Nomination form below!
​BOOK OF THE MONTH:

​May 2025


Shelby's Pick:​ Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver
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Barbara Kingsolver’s Demon Copperhead is a powerful exploration of the opioid crisis and its devastating effects on rural communities. The novel vividly portrays the challenges clinicians face in resource-limited settings, highlighting issues of burnout, barriers to care, and the struggle to implement evidence-based medicine. Through its deeply personal storytelling, the book underscores the health disparities experienced by marginalized Appalachian populations, emphasizing the need for patient-centered care and culturally responsive interventions. By illustrating systemic failures and the consequences of misinformation in healthcare, Demon Copperhead aligns with the mission of academic detailing to support clinicians, promote clinical change, and address public health challenges with evidence-based solutions.

Learn more about Shelby and the work she does!

​

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Shelby's favorite quote from the book:

“What’s an oxy, I’d asked. That November it was still a shiny new thing. OxyContin, God’s gift for the laid-off deep-hole man with his back and neck bones grinding like bags of gravel. For the bent-over lady pulling double shifts at Dollar General with her shot knees and ADHD grandkids to raise by herself. For every football player with some of this or that torn up, and the whole world riding on his getting back in the game. This was our deliverance. The tree was shaken and yes, we did eat of the apple.”
April 2025 Book of the Month

April 2025

Amanda's Pick:​ Creating Effective Teams: A Guide for Members and Leaders – Seventh Edition by Susan A. Wheelan, Maria Akerlund, Christian Jacobsson

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​Creating Effective Teams: A Guide for Members and Leaders provides expert strategies for building high-performing teams in any professional setting.
 
Amanda says she chose this book because “many AD programs struggle to be effective teams – detailers may be part-time, at a geographic distance from one another, have slightly different visions of AD, etc. Even small teams sometimes struggle to effectively collaborate. This book could be used by AD teams to improve their performance as a team and bring their collaboration to the next level, which will hopefully improve their job satisfaction and performance as detailers.”
 
Learn more about Amanda and the work she does!

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Amanda's favorite quote from the book: 

"A work group is composed of members who are striving to create a shared view of goals and to develop an efficient and effective organizational structure in which to accomplish those goals. A work group becomes a team when shared goals have been established and effective methods to accomplish those goals are in place.”
March 2025 Book of the Month
​March 2025

Vishal's Pick:​ Meditations by Marcus Aurelius
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​Meditations is a philosophical work that presents excerpts from the personal writings of Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius, in which he reflects on himself and the nature of the universe.

Vishal chose this book because it is well-organized into smaller sections, but each section carries immense weight and he loves the ability to sit and really think about what each passage means. 

Vishal says, "This book is significant to me because it helps me look at the world through a new light and I feel renewed and like a brand new person every time I read a passage. It helps me be a better person - both professionally and personally. Although it is not inherently about academic detailing, there are several quotes that truly ring true in this field. 

My favorite quote is a simple one: 'If it is not right, do not do it. If it is not true, do not say it.' This really boils philosophy down to a golden rule: do the right thing, plain and simple. This quote can also be utilized in the wonderful world of AD - we use evidence and facts to motivate and influence behavior change and this is something that can help give us the perspective of a clinician: at the end of the day, we all need to do what is right and what is factual - and we are just here to guide the clinician to do what is right and say what is true. It all comes full circle!"

​Learn more about Vishal and the work he does! 

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Vishal's favorite quote from the book: 
​

​"If it is not right, do not do it. If it is not true, do not say it."
February 2025 Book of the Month
February 2025

Zack's Pick:​ Leading Change by John P. Kotter
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Leading Change explores practical steps for adapting to change successfully in any organization. The author argues that leadership, rather than management alone, is crucial for navigating change.

Zack chose this book because of the insights that apply to work, leadership, parenting, and life. He finds its relevance to AD just as compelling.

Zack says, "If you consider AD an enterprise - and we should - then it is an enterprise that cascades within the healthcare enterprise, where change is somehow both fast-paced and seemingly impossible.

The first chapter, Creating a Sense of Urgency is laced with examples that will send shivers down your spine; 'this is exactly what makes healthcare so hard to change' - I find myself saying this over and over again. The chapter ends somewhat ominously with this quote, 'the point is to counteract insider myopia with external data. In a fast-moving world, insider myopia can be deadly.'

​Thankfully, the author has tons of practical advice to share with readers.
Though he may not know what AD is, I feel like he’s talking to us."

Learn more about Zack and the work he does!

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Zack's favorite quote from the book: 
​

"And those people […] who encourage others to leap into the future, who help them overcome natural fears, and who thus expand the […] capacity in their organization (ie, healthcare) - these people provide a profoundly important service for the entire human community. We need more of these people."
January 2024 Book of the Month
J​anuary 2025

Mike's Pick:​ The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot
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The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks tells the story of Henrietta Lacks, whose cancer cells were taken without her knowledge in 1951. The cells became the first immortal human cell line, driving breakthroughs in vaccines, cancer treatments, and gene mapping. The book intertwines Henrietta's personal history with the scientific legacy of her cells, while exploring the ethical issues of consent, race, and medical research.

Mike chose this book because it raises important issues to consider in evidence-based medicine, especially in whether the evidence is developed fairly, equitably, and ethically. It also gives useful insights into why some people and communities might not trust the medical establishment, which can be hard to understand for those of us who have spent our whole careers inside it.

​Learn more about Mike and the work he does!

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Mike's favorite quote from the book: 

“I’ve tried to imagine how she’d feel knowing that her cells went up in the first space missions to see what would happen to human cells in zero gravity, or that they helped with some of the most important advances in medicine: the polio vaccine, chemotherapy, cloning, gene mapping, in vitro fertilization. I’m pretty sure that she—like most of us—would be shocked to hear that there are trillions more of her cells growing in laboratories now than there ever were in her body.”
​December 2024 Book of the Month
December 2024

​
Bevin's Pick:​ Defund Fear by Zach Norris
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Defund Fear looks critically not only at the current state of the justice system, but the collective psychology that got us to a place where fear, capitalism, and the isolation both can cause are at the center of a system that doesn't seem to consistently accomplish what it sets out to, with negative repercussions for the most vulnerable members of our society. Drastically different than any other book looking at policing and justice, Zack Norris honors our shared humanity and delineates between justice and true accountability, imagining what society could look like if we get to the bottom of our fears and begin to make the right changes on a systematic and social level.

Bevin chose this thought-provoking and hopeful book because it focuses largely on the unfair social, economic, health-related, and legal ramifications of being a minority in a country that has a higher population of citizens in prisons than any other.​ Because NaRCAD's efforts focus on clinical behavior change to support marginalized populations, Bevin chose this book to highlight what those populations struggle with most.

​Learn more about Bevin and the work she does!

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​​Bevin's favorite quote from the book: 

“All of us can also participate in public safety by playing the role of community guardians. This is different from the [...] culture of suspicion. When we take part in things, when we engage, when we have a sense of choice in the matter, we feel a greater sense of worth, dignity, purpose. All this goes a long way to creating social cohesion, trust, relationships, and accountability, and therefore, a greater sense of safety.”
​November 2024 Book of the Month

​​November 2024

​
Anna's Pick:​ Rough Sleepers by Tracy Kidder
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Rough Sleepers is a compelling nonfiction book that follows Dr. Jim O'Connell, a physician dedicated to caring for Boston's unhoused population. This book is a tribute to frontline healthcare workers and a call to address the root causes of people experiencing homelessness.

Anna chose this book because it highlights the landscape of Boston's unhoused population and the experiences of the clinicians who serve them. Academic detailing emphasizes needs assessment, a way to ask questions that encourages clinician story-telling and sharing of personal experiences in caring for marginalized populations. As such, Anna found this book compelling in that it highlights clinician's individual experiences and approaches to supporting patients who are unhoused.

​Learn more about Anna and the work she does!

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​​Anna's favorite quote from the book: 


“Jim told the audience, 'I like to think of this problem of homelessness as a prism held up to society, and what we see refracted are the weaknesses in our health care system, our public health system, our housing system, but especially in our welfare system, our educational system, and our legal system—and our corrections system. If we’re going to fix this problem, we have to address the weaknesses of all those sectors.' It was a bleak assessment, implying that the only cure for homelessness would be an end to many of the country’s deep, abiding flaws.”
Explore our Inclusivity Toolkit!
Inclusivity Toolkit

    Nominate a book below!

    Members of the NaRCAD Community are encouraged to use the form below to share a book that others in the detailing world would find compelling due to its connection to evidence-based medicine; clinical change; clinician experiences; diverse populations; public health challenges; and other AD-related content.
Submit

​NaRCAD is a program of the Boston Medical Center, founded at Brigham & Women's Hospital, Division of Pharmacoepidemiology & Pharmacoeconomics.
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