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Illness Narratives in Practice: Potentials and Challenges of Using Narratives in Health-related Contexts

Illness Narratives in Practice: Potentials and Challenges of Using Narratives in Health-related Contexts

9780198806660
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Description
What is it like to live with an illness? How do diagnostic procedures, treatments, and other encounters with medical institutions affect a patients private and social life? By asking these types of questions, illness narratives have gained a reputation as a scientific domain in medicine in the last thirty years. Today, a patients story plays an important role in doctor-patient communication and the development of a healing relationship. However, whereas patient experiences have been well acknowledged, methodologically reflected upon and widely collected as research data, less consideration has been invested in exploring how they work in practice. Used in the context of diagnosis, treatment, and teaching, patient stories give us a new perspective on how healthcare could be improved. Illness Narratives in Practice:: Potentials and Challenges of Using Narratives in Health-related Contexts highlights the problems, challenges, and opportunities we face when using patient perspectives in practice and research in a clear format to provide readers with a comprehensive overview of this field. It investigates the epistemological foundations and communicational properties of illness narratives, as well as the pragmatic effects of using them as clinical and educational instruments.Significantly, it presents new examples from patient intakes and interviews that illustrate the disparity in communication between patients and medical professionals. The studies in this book also evaluate the experiences of medical practitioners and students who consciously use patient narratives as atool for improved communication and diagnosis. Divided into eight sections with practical examples for medical teaching and practice, this book covers the use of patient narratives in communication training and decision making across medicine and psychotherapy. In addition, it reflects on the ethical aspects of working with a patients personal experience of their illness, reports on cultural differences across the globe, and analyses how patients stories are used in politics and the media. Written by scholars from multiple disciplinesacross clinical and theoretical fields, this rich resource provides a critical stance on the use of narratives in medical research, education, and practice.
Product Details
OUP Oxford
84866
9780198806660
9780198806660

Data sheet

Publication date
2018
Issue number
1
Cover
paperback
Pages count
384
Dimensions (mm)
171 x 246
Weight (g)
666
  • Section 1: Introduction; Introduction: Chances and problems of illness narratives; Section 2: Methodological and epistemological challenges; Illness narratives in practice: which questions do we have to face when collecting and using them?; The researchers role in re-constructing patient narratives to present them as patient experiences; Stories, illness and narrative norms; Choices of illness narratives in practice: applying ideas of sampling and generalizability; Section 3: Ethical and communicational aspects of using narratives in medicine; Illness Narratives in Counselling - Narrative Medicine and Narrative Ethics; An Illness Narrative or a Social Injustice Narrative?; Section 4: Narratives in psychotherapy, rehabilitation and vocational training; Retelling ones life story - Using narratives to improve quality of life in case of chronic language impairment; Narrative practice, Neurotrauma, and Rehabilitation; Illness narratives in the workplace; Section 5: Narratives in training of communication and empathy; Using narratives for Medical Humanities in medical training; Narratives for training doctors in Korea; How to use illness narratives in medical education: First teaching experiences with the German DIPEx website project; Using patient narratives as source material for creative writing; Engaging the Vulnerable Encounter: engendering narratives for change in healthcare practice by using participatory theatre methods; Drawing on narrative accounts of dementia in education and care; Section 6: Narratives in diagnostics; Using illness narratives in clinical diagnosis: narrative reconstruction of epileptic and non-epileptic seizures and panic attacks; Structural Dream Analysis: a narrative methodology for investigating the meaning of dream series and their development in the course of psychotherapy; Section 7: Narratives in decision making; Whats in a name: anecdotes, experience, and the meaning of stories; Narratives in decision aids: A controversy; Section 8: Narratives in health care; Understanding and using health experiences to improve healthcare - examples from the United Kingdom; Illness narratives as evidence for healthcare policy; When Public and Private Narratives Diverge: Media, Policy Advocacy, and the Paradoxes of Newborn Screening Policy; Section 9: Illness narratives in the media; Pregnancy 2.0: A Corpus-based Case Study for the Analysis of Illness Narratives Online; Changes in Authenticity: Perceptions of Parents and Youth with ADHD of the Effects of Stimulant Medication; Illness narratives in political communication: instrumental, institutional, and social functions of political actors public illness accounts;
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