Literature DB >> 3392815

Righting the medical record. Transforming chronicle into story.

W J Donnelly1.   

Abstract

Narratives of illness in medical records and case presentations in teaching hospitals say surprisingly little about an important matter: what patients understand and feel. Nowadays, medical narratives tend to neglect or objectify subjective experience, including symptoms. Such narratives concentrate, in the manner of chronicles, on events in the exterior, objective world rather than the interior world of the sick. Medical students and physicians will construct more balanced accounts of human illness once they envision these accounts as "story", a form of narrative that traditionally accesses subjective experience as well as objective events. One can effectively begin the process of transforming medical chronicles into stories simply by asking patients what they know and how they feel about their situation and by documenting the response, using some of the patient's words, in the history of present illness. These actions will identify and preserve important information, facilitate empathy in all care givers who hear or read the history, and signal to everyone the physician's serious interest in patients as persons. Getting the voice of the patient into the history of present illness will not only help to right the medical record, but also help to right the relationship of physician and patient.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Professional Patient Relationship

Mesh:

Year:  1988        PMID: 3392815

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA        ISSN: 0098-7484            Impact factor:   56.272


  10 in total

1.  Paradigms and personhood: a deepening of the dilemmas in ethics and medical ethics.

Authors:  E L Erde
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  1999-04

2.  Case notes and charting of bioethical case consultations.

Authors:  B Freedman; C Weijer; E Bereza
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  1993-05

3.  The voices of the medical record.

Authors:  S Poirier; D J Brauner
Journal:  Theor Med       Date:  1990-03

4.  Philip Roth's Patrimony: narrative and ethics in a case study.

Authors:  E L Erde
Journal:  Theor Med       Date:  1995-09

5.  Systematic inquiry for design of health care information systems: an example of elicitation of the patient stakeholder perspective.

Authors:  Jordan Eschler; Katie O'Leary; Logan Kendall; James D Ralston; Wanda Pratt
Journal:  Proc Annu Hawaii Int Conf Syst Sci       Date:  2015-01-05

Review 6.  Communication in the physician-patient relationship.

Authors:  A M Rees
Journal:  Bull Med Libr Assoc       Date:  1993-01

7.  The practitioner, the patient and resistance to change: recent ideas on compliance.

Authors:  C Butler; S Rollnick; N Stott
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  1996-05-01       Impact factor: 8.262

Review 8.  The History and Physical in Cancer Care: A Primer for the Oncology Advanced Practitioner.

Authors:  Margaret Quinn Rosenzweig; Diane Gardner; Brenda Griffith
Journal:  J Adv Pract Oncol       Date:  2014 Jul-Aug

9.  Restoring the patient's voice: the case of Gilda Radner.

Authors:  A H Hawkins
Journal:  Yale J Biol Med       Date:  1992 May-Jun

10.  National evaluation of the benefits and risks of greater structuring and coding of the electronic health record: exploratory qualitative investigation.

Authors:  Zoe Morrison; Bernard Fernando; Dipak Kalra; Kathrin Cresswell; Aziz Sheikh
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2013-11-01       Impact factor: 4.497

  10 in total

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