This document discusses the emerging field of narrative medicine. It begins by introducing narrative medicine as clinical practice informed by narrative competence, or the ability to understand and apply stories of illness. It then summarizes the key concepts and developments in narrative medicine, including:
- Training programs in narrative skills for healthcare professionals that focus on close reading, reflective writing, and bearing witness.
- Research showing such training can strengthen relationships with patients and perspective-taking abilities.
- The growing number of narrative medicine programs worldwide.
The document then outlines three core components of narrative medicine: attention, representation, and affiliation, citing relevant theories and evidence for each. It emphasizes how narrative skills can enhance clinical practice and the patient-provider
Metaparadigm and humanistic theory have 4 common points: The (person),which is the patient and the nurse. (Health), which is the situation, (environment), which is what is around you, pass experiences and education, and (nursing) which is the response, and all of the nursing interventions.
Martha Rogers’s Science of Unitary Human Beings...simplified...with a case sc...Karen V. Duhamel
This PowerPoint is a comprehensive overview of Martha Rogers's abstract conceptual model of the Science of Unitary Human Beings, with a simplified description of her model, including a case scenario illustrating key conceptual principles.
Metaparadigm and humanistic theory have 4 common points: The (person),which is the patient and the nurse. (Health), which is the situation, (environment), which is what is around you, pass experiences and education, and (nursing) which is the response, and all of the nursing interventions.
Martha Rogers’s Science of Unitary Human Beings...simplified...with a case sc...Karen V. Duhamel
This PowerPoint is a comprehensive overview of Martha Rogers's abstract conceptual model of the Science of Unitary Human Beings, with a simplified description of her model, including a case scenario illustrating key conceptual principles.
Talk given at the 3rd International EAP conference given at MISIS in Moscow on 26th November 2016, which uses a medical context to explain how it is now a priority to introduce the Humanities into all technical/scentific education
Her Culture Care Diversity & Universality theory was one of the earliest nursing theories and it remains the only theory focused specifically on transcultural nursing with a culture care focus.
Her theory is used worldwide.
Dr. Leininger served as dean and professor of nursing at the university of Washington and Utah and she helped initiate and direct the first doctoral programs in nursing.
The purpose of this investigation is:
- a new pathway to medical anthropology of split selves as found in shamanistic s?ances, and psychiatric disorders, with relevance ot self-help group settings.
In particular, the effect of small-group semi-therapeutic sessions as observed in Urakawa Bethel house will be discussed with reference to "cultural personhood.“
This work was presented during the II Workshop on Medical Anthropology in Rome, on October 14th - 15th 2011
Narrative approach plays an epoch-making role in improving the level of medical care, clinical psychology and welfare area.
First, I introduce the process and meaning of the Narrative Based Medicine
Next, I dare to observe a negative aspect and risk in Narrative Approach to look for a new role of Narrative Approach.
The work was presented during the II Workshop on Medical Anthropology in Rome, October 14th - 15th 2011.
“The Pure Guidelines of the Monastery
Are to be Inscribed in Your Bones and Mind”
Dogen (2010, p. 42): Mental Health Nurses’ Practices
as Ritualized Behaviour
Wonderful Principles Of Palliative Care Essay ~ Thatsnotus. Palliative care essays - Clarisse Cunada - Nursing - StuDocu. Certified Hospice And Palliative Care Administrator Study Guide - Study .... Palliative Care Mind Map, Health Concept for Presentations and Reports .... Introduction to palliative care. Hospice and Palliative Care. Palliative Care in the Time of COVID: A Visual Essay. Palliative Care in Heart Failure Essay Example | Topics and Well .... Reflective paper in PALLIATIVE CARE 260 Essay Example | Topics and Well .... Read «Palliative Care and Nursing Advocacy» Essay Sample for Free at .... Pediatric Palliative Care Fellowship Application Tips | Personal .... Mental health palliative_care. Palliative care for Enduring Conditions Essay Example | Topics and Well .... Hospice and Palliative Care Essay Example | Topics and Well Written .... Nursing Roles and Professional Attributes in Palliative Care Essay ....
This the introductory presentation on the theory that underpins the consultation between doctor and patient. I would value any comments on these presentations: my hope is that your interest will lead to deeper insight into the process of consulting and to a sense of driving the quality of the interaction forward for the benefit of all parties.
Talk given at the 3rd International EAP conference given at MISIS in Moscow on 26th November 2016, which uses a medical context to explain how it is now a priority to introduce the Humanities into all technical/scentific education
Her Culture Care Diversity & Universality theory was one of the earliest nursing theories and it remains the only theory focused specifically on transcultural nursing with a culture care focus.
Her theory is used worldwide.
Dr. Leininger served as dean and professor of nursing at the university of Washington and Utah and she helped initiate and direct the first doctoral programs in nursing.
The purpose of this investigation is:
- a new pathway to medical anthropology of split selves as found in shamanistic s?ances, and psychiatric disorders, with relevance ot self-help group settings.
In particular, the effect of small-group semi-therapeutic sessions as observed in Urakawa Bethel house will be discussed with reference to "cultural personhood.“
This work was presented during the II Workshop on Medical Anthropology in Rome, on October 14th - 15th 2011
Narrative approach plays an epoch-making role in improving the level of medical care, clinical psychology and welfare area.
First, I introduce the process and meaning of the Narrative Based Medicine
Next, I dare to observe a negative aspect and risk in Narrative Approach to look for a new role of Narrative Approach.
The work was presented during the II Workshop on Medical Anthropology in Rome, October 14th - 15th 2011.
“The Pure Guidelines of the Monastery
Are to be Inscribed in Your Bones and Mind”
Dogen (2010, p. 42): Mental Health Nurses’ Practices
as Ritualized Behaviour
Wonderful Principles Of Palliative Care Essay ~ Thatsnotus. Palliative care essays - Clarisse Cunada - Nursing - StuDocu. Certified Hospice And Palliative Care Administrator Study Guide - Study .... Palliative Care Mind Map, Health Concept for Presentations and Reports .... Introduction to palliative care. Hospice and Palliative Care. Palliative Care in the Time of COVID: A Visual Essay. Palliative Care in Heart Failure Essay Example | Topics and Well .... Reflective paper in PALLIATIVE CARE 260 Essay Example | Topics and Well .... Read «Palliative Care and Nursing Advocacy» Essay Sample for Free at .... Pediatric Palliative Care Fellowship Application Tips | Personal .... Mental health palliative_care. Palliative care for Enduring Conditions Essay Example | Topics and Well .... Hospice and Palliative Care Essay Example | Topics and Well Written .... Nursing Roles and Professional Attributes in Palliative Care Essay ....
This the introductory presentation on the theory that underpins the consultation between doctor and patient. I would value any comments on these presentations: my hope is that your interest will lead to deeper insight into the process of consulting and to a sense of driving the quality of the interaction forward for the benefit of all parties.
Human becoming Hermeneutic Method and Parse Method
Published multiple qualitative research studies about lived experiences of health and quality of life (such as hope, laughing, joy-sorrow, feeling respected, contentment, feeling very tired and quality of life with Alzheimers disease)
004 Sample Nursing Admission Essay School Samples Nurse Practitioner .... 013 Nurse Practitioner Personal Statement Sample Nursing Essay ~ Thatsnotus. 020 Nursing School Essay Sample For Personal Statement Template College .... Get Graduate Program Essay Examples Latest - Essay.
Medicine is at heart a narrative activity–the telling and receiving of story. The patient interview is based on the notion that the patient, as story-teller, will share his or her experience, and that the doctor, as active listener, will be able to take that story and make sense of it in the world of science and medicine.
Health care is supposed to build on the story with each contact, but if we don’t know the story, each contact becomes a closed episode of its own, disconnected from every other episode. Fragmentation results as the outcome of a nonstoried approach to health care.
In this workshop, we will explore how the ancient art of storytelling can foster an empathetic healthcare model and generate a framework for a more holistic approach to treating the patient, while at the same time providing a rich source of diagnostic clues.
Narrative medicine represents a storied understanding of health. It’s a return to listening to the patient’s story. Doctors who are trained to listen to the story of the disease need to learn to listen also to the story of the illness. We’ll explore how to incorporate narrative medicine and storytelling into medical education
1. Vol 53: august • août 2007 Canadian Family Physician • Le Médecin de famille canadien 1265
Commentary
What to do with stories
The sciences of narrative medicine
Rita Charon MD Phd
B
efore her death last year, Dr Miriam Divinsky and
I corresponded about storytelling in medicine. Her
work introduced readers of this journal to narra-
tive medicine1
and paved the way for this special issue of
stories and reflections from practice, joining widespread
developments in this young discipline in North America
and worldwide. Her essay “Stories for life”1
eloquently
describes the personal insight and active affiliation physi-
cians derived from telling one another stories from prac-
tice. Here I want to extend this affiliation with her, no
matter if she is on the other side of mortality, and with
readers and writers summoned by her, to give voice to
these stories that saturate our practices and our lives.
Development of narrative medicine
I first used the phrase “narrative medicine” in 2000 to
refer to clinical practice fortified by narrative compe-
tence—the capacity to recognize, absorb, metabolize,
interpret, and be moved by stories of illness. Simply, it
is medicine practised by someone who knows what to
do with stories. My colleagues and I have conceptual-
ized and put into practice some basic tenets of narrative
medicine. To acknowledge our cocreation of these ideas,
I must introduce my team, for our work could not have
been done without us all: Sayantani DasGupta, Craig
Irvine, Eric Marcus, Maura Spiegel, Patricia Stanley, and
me. I will rely on work published by each of us to point
readers toward the intellectual and scientific bases of
our emerging theory and practice.
Methods
At Columbia University in New York, NY, we provide
narrative training (ie, rigorous training in close read-
ing, attentive listening, reflective writing, and bearing
witness to suffering) to doctors, nurses, social workers,
psychoanalysts, therapists, literary scholars, and writ-
ers who attend our intensive training workshops. We
also provide such training to students of medicine, nurs-
ing, physical and occupational therapy, pastoral care,
oral history, social work, literary studies, and law. Our
research projects are accruing evidence that students
and clinicians who have undergone narrative train-
ing with us strengthen their therapeutic alliances with
patients and deepen their ability to adopt or identify oth-
ers’ perspectives.2
Narrative medicine curricula and projects are prolif-
erating throughout the United States, Canada, Europe,
Great Britain, Latin America, the Middle East, and
Australia. We take this explosive growth of interest and
practice as evidence that capacities that are currently
lacking within clinical practice and for which clinicians
and patients yearn—singular recognition of patients and
authentic use of the self by clinicians—can be devel-
oped through our emerging practice of bringing narra-
tive knowledge and skill to bear on the care of the sick.
We have proposed a conceptual framework for
understanding why narrative skills matter for clinicians
and for patients and have proposed intermediates and
mechanisms by which narrative training bestows its
benefits on clinicians. The science of our practice gradu-
ally revealed itself as we struggled to articulate what we
observed in our narrative teaching in medical settings.
Adopting a method of concentrated and closely
observed and recorded teaching of one another in a
2-year intensive seminar followed by self-conscious
teaching in a selected group of clinical settings (humani-
ties seminars for second-year medical students, writing
seminars for staff members on in-patient wards, litera-
ture seminars for physicians, creative writing workshops
for health care professionals, and writing seminars for
mixed groups of clinicians and patients), we generated
and then tested hypotheses about the sequelae of forti-
fying narrative skills in these settings. What emerged as
our science derived chiefly from narrative theory, autobi-
ographical theory, phenomenology, psychoanalytic the-
ory, trauma studies, and aesthetics.
The following discussion will review our current
thinking about each of the 3 movements we have iden-
tified in narrative medicine—attention, representation,
and affiliation—and will cite the sources of our evidence
for each one.
Attention
The clinician caring for a sick person must begin by
entering the sick person’s presence and absorbing
what can be learned about that person’s situation. A
combination of mindfulness, contribution of the self,
acute observation, and attuned concentration enables
the doctor to register what the patient emits in words,
silence, and physical state. Contemplative practices,
aesthetic appreciation, and Freud’s evenly hovering
attention all have something to teach narrative med-
icine about the attainment and use of attention. By
becoming a recognizing vessel, the doctor can “receive”
FOR PRESCRIBING INFORMATION SEE PAGE 1366
2. 1266 Canadian Family Physician • Le Médecin de famille canadien Vol 53: august • août 2007
Commentary
the patient, acting as a container for a flow of great
value or, with a different image, registering a transmit-
ted radio signal from far away.
Pediatrician Sayantani DasGupta invokes Buddhist
learning and what she has coined “narrative humil-
ity” to describe the stance of the clinician who would
hope to pay narratively competent attention to patients,
embracing patients as teachers and recognizing our-
selves as lifelong learners who always begin to know
how to listen to, and surrender to, the other.3
DasGupta
has also applied concepts and methods of oral his-
tory to clinical work, reasoning that the oral histori-
an’s nonjudgmental acceptance of the testimony of
the sufferer adds to our understanding of the attentive
presence required of the doctor. Seeing these similari-
ties between clinical practice and both contemplative
states and oral history not only gives
intellectual clarity to our practice, but
also enhances clinical training by sug-
gesting for our use some of the tech-
niques used in preparing trainees for
these other practices.
In addition to being a psychologi-
cal or interior state, attention in clinical
practice is a peculiarly narrative state.
However material its concerns with flesh and bone seem
to be, medicine attends to words—the spoken language
of patients, the dictated language of discharge summa-
ries, the scrawled longhand of intern progress notes, the
increasingly keyboarded “sign out” onto the electronic
medical record, the messages of love and loss given and
received near death.
Philosopher Craig Irvine brings the philosophy of
Emmanuel Levinas to bear on our narrative medicine
theory, suggesting that Levinas’s ethics of the face—
accepting the moral duties incurred by virtue of a hum-
ble facing up to the otherness of the other—orients
clinicians toward patients with fresh vision and ethical
strength.4
For Levinas, only discourse has the capac-
ity to unite 2 distinct “others,” and so the serious study
of discourse between persons, whether in clinical con-
versation or in literary text, is essential to the task of
attending fully to the other. We find that by teaching
trainees the skills of close reading (and generally we
ask them to read literary texts of prose or poetry), we
are conveying the basic skills of clinical attention, by
which doctors, nurses, and social workers can absorb
all that their patients and colleagues have to tell.
Representation
Narrative medicine is by no means the first or only
discipline to turn to narrative writing for help under-
standing complex events or states of affairs. While the
dividends of clarity and comprehension for the writer in
a clinical setting are becoming widely understood today,
our hypotheses about why writing helps clinicians and
patients offer particular illumination for medicine. Unlike
the feeling ascribed to Freud that one writes about an
unpleasant experience in order to rid oneself of it, we
have come to realize that narrative writing in clinical
settings makes audible and visible that which otherwise
would pass without notice.
In our writing sessions, we invite participants to
describe complex clinical situations, in effect taking
a chaotic or formless experience and conferring form
on it. What emerges as a written text might be a prose
paragraph, a poem, a scenic dialogue, an obituary, an
encomium, or a love letter (one nurse once wrote a
recipe for us), which, when examined closely by read-
ers or listeners, conveys its meaning by both its content
and its form. Even unpractised writers find themselves
surprised by the discovery process of writing, and often
the most striking discoveries are made
not in what is written but in how the
text is configured. Our students learn
to examine their texts’ genres, figura-
tive language, temporal structures, the
stance of the narrator, and allusions to
other texts—the narrative features that
a literary scholar would consider in the
study of any written text.
Novelist Henry James and literary scholar Roland
Barthes both remind us that “expression” connotes put-
ting sensations and perceptions into words and also the
muscular process of delivering the essence of some-
thing into view—like expressing juice from a lemon or
milk from a nipple.5
Hence, the meaning of what gets
expressed comes simultaneously from the one writing
and the subject of that writing. The representational act
requires the expressive force and creativity of the writer
along with the contained meaning of that which is now
in view, unifying seer and seen in the creation of the text.
When patients or family caregivers write accounts
of their illness experiences, readers have an intimate
and urgent role to play in response. Neither casual nor
coy, these texts are asking something of their readers—
asking for witness, for presence, for answer. Health
advocate Patricia Stanley proposes that the patient
simultaneously suffers isolation from loved ones, from
his or her healthy body, and from the self. Representing
the events of illness offers hope that others can heed
the isolated ones and reconnect those people by hear-
ing them out fully.6
Whether sick or well, the reader of
an illness narrative is summoned by the author to join
with the teller—to form community that can combat
the isolation of illness.
We see coming into view, then, the high stakes and
urgent tasks of narrative writing in clinical settings. Not
merely reports against forgetfulness or solipsistic diary-
making, these narrative reflections take on the force
of both creation and clinical intervention. The writing
renders the doctor audible, the patient visible, and the
There is hope
for connection,
for recognition,
for communion
3. Vol 53: august • août 2007 Canadian Family Physician • Le Médecin de famille canadien 1267
Commentary
treatment a healing conversation between them. Until
the writing, there are 2 isolated beings—the doctor and
the patient—both of whom suffer, and both of whom
suffer alone. By virtue of the writing, there is hope for
connection, for recognition, for communion.
Affiliation
The movements of attention and representation spiral
together toward the ultimate goal of narrative medi-
cine: affiliation. It is this that we are after—the authentic
and muscular connections between doctor and patient,
between nurse and social worker, among children of
a dying parent, among citizens trying to choose a just
and equitable health care policy. The affiliation extends
inward, too, to join doctors or nurses with themselves in
a sustained habit of clinical reflection or to allow the sud-
denly ill patient to recognize the same self who existed
before illness came. Instead of lamenting the decline of
empathy among medical students or the lack of altru-
ism among physicians, narrative medicine focuses on our
capacity to join one another as we suffer illness, bear the
burdens of our clinical powerlessness, or simply, together,
bravely contemplate our mortal limits on earth.
The science undergirding this movement of narrative
medicine examines what happens when human beings
contemplate pain and suffering. We turn, for one source
of clarity, to aesthetics and cinema studies, which illumi-
nate the state of affairs when a witness sees a scene of
pain. Literary scholar Maura Spiegel’s pioneering work
in the narrative permeability of film and dreams recon-
ceptualizes empathy to suggest not only an internal state
of virtuous self-negation and other-direction, but also a
creative and active state of absorption and cocreation of
story in which the viewer, too, is permeable to remaking
of experience and thought.7
We, the viewers, are mobi-
lized in witnessing others’ suffering, be it in an intensive
care unit or a darkened movie house, not only to compre-
hend what that suffering might mean to the patient or the
subject of the film, but also to witness and comprehend
what such suffering might mean or might have meant to
ourselves. And so the interpenetration of self and other—
the goal of affiliation—is seen within the very seat of the
observation.
Such discoveries unite film—and by extension any cre-
ative and textual product—with dreams. Psychoanalyst
Eric Marcus enriches our narrative medicine theory with
his evidence of the thematic struggles toward selfhood
undergone repeatedly by hundreds of students and train-
ees.8
By mobilizing psychoanalytic theories of Freud,
Winnicott, and Lacan, and bringing them to bear on our
work, Marcus deepens the theorizing possible in narra-
tive medicine to probe intrapsychic economies and ther-
apeutic goals of care. Any form of care of the sick shares
some aspects of the analytic situation—its transferences,
its formal intimacy, and its privileged and dutiful expe-
rience of another’s inward states. More practically, the
care of the sick requires the analyst’s creativity in inhab-
iting without colonizing the lived experience of the one
who suffers.
Narrative medicine training is, as a result of Marcus’s
insights, recognized as a form of analytic supervision,
requiring candidates to examine and undergo their
own affective experiences and requesting trainers to
make sustained commitments to trainees. As a result of
Spiegel’s insights, we see that such training requires the
willingness to creatively “think with stories” toward per-
sonal and public meaning.7
Conclusion
This short review of the conceptual foundations of nar-
rative medicine is offered in a spirit of exploration and
as an invitation to think with us about the phenomenon
of narration in medicine. As we health care profession-
als and patients delve into the challenges and rewards
of serious storytelling in illness, we see with new clar-
ity deep aspects of the illness, the sick person, the situ-
ation of care, and the person who cares for the sick. We
see, too, newly opening avenues toward the human affili-
ations that alone can ease suffering, those bonds that
indeed unite us with Divinsky, wherever she now is, and
with all who have been and who have suffered.
Dr Charon is a Professor of Clinical Medicine in the
Department of Medicine and Director of the Program in
Narrative Medicine at Columbia University in New York, NY.
Competing interests
None declared
Correspondence to: Dr Rita Charon, Department of
Medicine and Program in Narrative Medicine, Columbia
University, 630 W 168th St, New York, NY 10032 USA;
telephone 212 305-4942; fax 212 305-9349; e-mail
rac5@columbia.edu
The opinions expressed in commentaries are those of
the authors. Publication does not imply endorsement by
the College of Family Physicians of Canada.
References
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Physician 2007;53:203-5 (Eng), 209-11 (Fr).
2. Charon R. Narrative medicine: honoring the stories of illness. New York, NY:
Oxford University Press; 2006. p. 155-74.
3. DasGupta S. Between stillness and story: lessons of children’s illness narra-
tives. Pediatrics 2007;119(6):e1384-91. p. 1391.
4. Irvine CA. The other side of silence: Levinas, medicine, and literature. Lit Med
2005;24(1):8-18.
5. Charon R. Narrative lights on clinical acts. What we, like Maisie, know.
Partial Answers 2006;4(2):41-58.
6. Stanley P. The patient’s voice: a cry in solitude or a call for community. Lit
Med 2004;23(2):346-63.
7. Heiserman A, Spiegel M. Narrative permeability: crossing the dissociative
barrier in and out of films. Lit Med 2006;25(2):463-74.
8. Marcus ER. Medical student dreams about medical school: the uncon-
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2003;84(2):367-86.