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  1. This toolkit contains advice and guidance about taking and using stories from patients, carers and staff. It contains templates for: • Informing the storyteller about the process • Obtaining consent • Analysing stories • Action planning and logging 1. Why gather and use stories from patients, carers and staff?

    • 407KB
    • 28
    • Stories in Everyday Life
    • Story Circles
    • Stories and Rehabilitative Medicine
    • How to Leverage The Power of Stories

    Sharing stories is ubiquitous in everyday social interaction. Whether speaking with colleagues over coffee, with family over the dinner table, or old friends across the miles, we talk about what happened to us and we listen to their stories of what happened to them. Stories about personal experiences emerge about every 5 minutes in everyday convers...

    Story Circles are semi-structured ways of bringing people together to share their stories in order to build meaningful connections, and use the power of stories to create community.13When we share our stories with others, and they share their stories with us, we connect, sometimes in surprisingly deep ways. Story Circles work on a few basic princip...

    So far, this article has told a very nice story. But so what? How might these concepts influence care, both for patients and medical providers, in a rehabilitative setting? Emerging research demonstrates the power of stories to build connections, to create identities, and to help individuals understand and empathize with others. In all of these way...

    So, how can providers use this information effectively for themselves? I end with some suggestions for how you can leverage the power of stories. 1. Keep a journal.Each day, write about your own difficult, stressful, or challenging experiences. In writing, explore your deepest thoughts and emotions, and reflect on what you think each experience mea...

  2. These powerful memoirs, however, move us to ask, whose stories are they telling? What are physicians’ responsibilities towards patients when they put them on paper? In this issue of Virtual Mentor, we explore the ethics of writing about patients and examine the sometimes conflicting, sometimes synergistic duties of physician and author.

    • Rimma Osipov
    • 2011
  3. Here, session chair Mikkael Sekeres, MD, MS (Editor-in-Chief of ASH Clinical News), and speaker Danielle Ofri, MD, PhD, discuss the importance of patient stories and using narrative to enhance the doctor-patient relationship.

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  6. Dec 1, 2018 · Dr. Ofri: The patient’s story is the primary clinical data in the medical encounter. From the stories, we get the most important information for clinical diagnoses. But, beyond that, the narrative places the patient’s illness in context.

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