Narrative Medicine: Honoring the Stories of IllnessOxford University Press, 2. 3. 2006 - Počet stran: 288 Narrative medicine has emerged in response to a commodified health care system that places corporate and bureaucratic concerns over the needs of the patient. Generated from a confluence of sources including humanities and medicine, primary care medicine, narratology, and the study of doctor-patient relationships, narrative medicine is medicine practiced with the competence to recognize, absorb, interpret, and be moved by the stories of illness. By placing events in temporal order, with beginnings, middles, and ends, and by establishing connections among things using metaphor and figural language, narrative medicine helps doctors to recognize patients and diseases, convey knowledge, accompany patients through the ordeals of illness--and according to Rita Charon, can ultimately lead to more humane, ethical, and effective health care. Trained in medicine and in literary studies, Rita Charon is a pioneer of and authority on the emerging field of narrative medicine. In this important and long-awaited book she provides a comprehensive and systematic introduction to the conceptual principles underlying narrative medicine, as well as a practical guide for implementing narrative methods in health care. A true milestone in the field, it will interest general readers, and experts in medicine and humanities, and literary theory. |
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Strana 4
... words, gestures, silences, tracings, images, laboratory test results, and changes in the body—and to cohere all these stories into something that made provisional sense, enough sense, that is, on which to act. These narratives had many ...
... words, gestures, silences, tracings, images, laboratory test results, and changes in the body—and to cohere all these stories into something that made provisional sense, enough sense, that is, on which to act. These narratives had many ...
Strana 10
... words, silences, and behaviors; how, as a reader or a listener, to enter authentic relation with a writer or a teller or a text; and how to bring one's own thoughts and sensations to achieving the status of language. We know how to ...
... words, silences, and behaviors; how, as a reader or a listener, to enter authentic relation with a writer or a teller or a text; and how to bring one's own thoughts and sensations to achieving the status of language. We know how to ...
Strana 21
... words, the realization that “illness is the nightside of life, a more onerous citizenship.”7 Unlike other divides—gender, race, class, place, age, time—that separate one human being from another, the divide between the sick and the well ...
... words, the realization that “illness is the nightside of life, a more onerous citizenship.”7 Unlike other divides—gender, race, class, place, age, time—that separate one human being from another, the divide between the sick and the well ...
Strana 23
... word, the name of his wife, “Sarah.” Over and over, he called out, “Sarah, Sarah.” His rhythmic one-word lament told me, an inexperienced third-year medical student, all that he could not put into words. His lament conveyed to me that ...
... word, the name of his wife, “Sarah.” Over and over, he called out, “Sarah, Sarah.” His rhythmic one-word lament told me, an inexperienced third-year medical student, all that he could not put into words. His lament conveyed to me that ...
Strana 28
... word he was saying was not “etiology” but “ideology,” pronounced with the short “i.” The whole discussion made sense either way.) Doctors might be convinced about the cause of a disease only by replicable scientific evidence, while ...
... word he was saying was not “etiology” but “ideology,” pronounced with the short “i.” The whole discussion made sense either way.) Doctors might be convinced about the cause of a disease only by replicable scientific evidence, while ...
Obsah
NARRATIVES OF ILLNESS | 63 |
DEVELOPING NARRATIVE COMPETENCE | 105 |
DIVIDENDS OF NARRATIVE MEDICINE | 175 |
References | 239 |
Index | 259 |
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able affiliation another’s aspects attention autobiography bear witness become bioethics body cancer Charon clinical practice clinicians close reading colleagues critical culture death develop disease duties emotional empathy ethics experience face fear feel fiction genre Geoffrey Hartman Gérard Genette health care professionals health professionals hear Henry James hospital chart human illness individual internist intersubjective James’s Jerome Bruner knowledge life-writing listening literary scholars lives Lucy Grealy meaning medical students medicine’s metaphor moral narrative acts narrative competence narrative medicine narrative training narratology narrator novel nurses oncology one’s pain Parallel Chart Paul Farmer perhaps person physician plot present reader realize recognize reflective relationships representation Roland Barthes Roy Schafer sense sick singularity skills social workers story studies suffering symptoms teaching teller temporal Theodore Sarbin theory things tients tion tive told trauma understand virtue Wayne Booth woman words writing written Yossarian