Personal illness narratives: using reflective writing to teach empathy

S DasGupta, R Charon - Academic Medicine, 2004 - journals.lww.com
S DasGupta, R Charon
Academic Medicine, 2004journals.lww.com
Reflective writing is one established method for teaching medical students empathetic
interactions with patients. Most such exercises rely on students' reflecting upon clinical
experiences. To effectively elicit, interpret, and translate the patient's story, however, a
reflective practitioner must also be self-aware, personally and professionally. Race, gender,
and other embodied sources of identity of practitioners and patients have been shown to
influence the nature of clinical communication. Yet, although medical practice is dedicated to …
Abstract
Reflective writing is one established method for teaching medical students empathetic interactions with patients. Most such exercises rely on students’ reflecting upon clinical experiences. To effectively elicit, interpret, and translate the patient's story, however, a reflective practitioner must also be self-aware, personally and professionally. Race, gender, and other embodied sources of identity of practitioners and patients have been shown to influence the nature of clinical communication. Yet, although medical practice is dedicated to examining, diagnosing, and treating bodies, the relationship of physicians to their own physicality is vexed. Medical training creates a dichotomy whereby patients are identified by their bodies while physicians’ bodies are secondary to physicians’ minds. As a result, little opportunity is afforded to physicians to deal with personal illness experiences, be they their own or those of loved ones.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果