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**Winner of the 2022 American Sociological Association’s Sociology of Emotion Section Outstanding Recent Contribution Award**

A frank analysis of the medical and emotional inequalities that pervade the illness experience for critically ill children and their families.

Families who have a child with a life-threatening illness face a daunting road ahead of them, one that not only upends their everyday lives, but also strikes at the very heart of parenthood. In “Save My Kid,” Amanda M. Gengler traces the emotional difficulties these families navigate as they confront a fundamentally unequal healthcare system in the United States. 

Gengler reveals the unrecognized, everyday inequalities tangled up in the process of seeking medical care, showing how different families manage their children’s critical illnesses. She also uncovers the role that emotional goals—deeply rooted in the culture of illness and medicine—play in medical decision-making, healthcare interactions, and the end of children’s lives. 

A deeply compassionate read, “Save My Kid” is an inside look at inequality in healthcare among those with the most at stake.

Available for purchase from Amazon and NYU Press.

“Save my Kid” has been reviewed in Contemporary Sociology, The American Journal of Sociology, Social Forces, The Lancet-Child and Adolescent Health, and Symbolic Interaction.

“Gengler's measured yet empathetic tone sets an example for all sociologists writing on emotionally charged topics. As intense as her account oftentimes is, it never devolves into empty sensationalism. The result is an eloquent and memorable illustration of how social inequalities play out in hospitals—a solid contribution to medical sociology, the sociology of emotions, and scholarship on culture and inequality." ~Roi Livne, American Journal of Sociology

"Amanda Gengler movingly captures the high-stakes world of families coping with severe childhood illness and their struggle to maintain hope as they navigate the contemporary health landscape where inequality abound. A vivid demonstration of health as an arena that intensifies inequalities between families." ~Amy Best, author of Fast Food Kids: Lunch Lines, French Fries and Social Ties

"Amanda Gengler is a gifted ethnographer whose compassion and insight illuminate parents’ harrowing efforts to maintain hope while seeking life-saving treatments for their children. In showing how emotions intersect with cultural health capital, this indispensable book exposes the complex ways social inequality affects our ability to hope and cope in times of crisis." ~Jennifer Lois, author of Home is Where the School is: The Logic of Homeschooling and the Emotional Labor of Mothering

"With deep empathy and drawing from personal experience, this mesmerizing ethnography explores the opportunities and pitfalls of hope when parents face the challenge of their child’s life threatening disease. Rather than pinning all our hopes on hope, Gengler calls for a broader and more flexible emotional spectrum in times of life-or-death health crises." ~Stefan Timmermans, co-author of Saving Babies: The Consequences of Newborn Genetic Screening