Results 251 to 260 of about 173,410 (310)
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Narrating Medicine in Middle English Poetry
2022Filling a gap in what we know about medical writing in England in the 100+ years after the advent of the “Great Mortality”, this book calls attention to a discourse that privileges illness narratives, strategies of self-care, and the voices of poets, patients, and practitioners.
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Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 2022
In healthcare institutions across the country, the role of poetry continues to emerge within the liminal spaces between the medical humanities and clinical care. While the field of narrative medicine is well-developed generally, formal review of the state of poetry as a healing modality is limited.
Ian Kwok +6 more
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In healthcare institutions across the country, the role of poetry continues to emerge within the liminal spaces between the medical humanities and clinical care. While the field of narrative medicine is well-developed generally, formal review of the state of poetry as a healing modality is limited.
Ian Kwok +6 more
openaire +2 more sources
Journal of the History of Ideas, 2023
Over more than thirty years the Bolognese botanist, natural historian, and physician Ulisse Aldrovandi compiled his Pandechion epistemonicon-a manuscript encyclopedia composed of pasted note slips drawn from books he was reading. This article examines the 580 slips that comprise Aldrovandi's Pandechion entry on old age.
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Over more than thirty years the Bolognese botanist, natural historian, and physician Ulisse Aldrovandi compiled his Pandechion epistemonicon-a manuscript encyclopedia composed of pasted note slips drawn from books he was reading. This article examines the 580 slips that comprise Aldrovandi's Pandechion entry on old age.
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Insights into Professional Identity Formation in Medicine: Memoirs and Poetry
The European Legacy, 2011Doctors in the Making: Memoirs and Medical Education. By Suzanne Poirier (Iowa City, IA: University of Iowa Press, 2009), x + 200 pp. $39.95 cloth.
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Lean Forward and Listen: poetry as a mode of understanding in medicine
Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 2015Many claims have been made over recent years for the use of poetry (and, more broadly, literature) in the curriculum of medical students. Most often, poetry is put forward as having the potential to humanize medicine by promoting, for example, empathy, ethical sensitivity, and an appreciation for diverging interpretations. While these endpoints are all
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What Can Medicine Do for Poetry? Poetry in the First Year of the CMAJ
Perspectives in Biology and Medicineabstract: Much has been written about how poetry can be of use to medicine and medical education, privileging an instrumental perspective. But what might medicine contribute to poetry, beyond “subject matter”? Through enactive metaphors specific to medicine, medicine can bring body to words, and specific context to abstractions.
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Poetry for the Uninitiated: Dannie Abse’s “X-Ray” in an Undergraduate Medicine and Literature Class
Journal of Medical Humanities, 2013I recently taught an upper-division Honors class in Medicine and Literature with students ranging from a pre-physician's assistant student and nursing student to English, French, History, and Technical Writing majors. The common thread connecting these students initially was their self-described fear of and helplessness with poetry.
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Anna Barbauld's 'To a Little Invisible Being...': Maternity in Poetry and Medicine
2015Anna Barbauld’s ‘To a Little Invisible Being who is Expected Soon to Become Visible’ is perhaps the most anthologized British Romantic poem on maternity, and the least representative. Critics as di erent as Jerome McGann and Julie Kipp have read the poem metaphysically.
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Radiotheranostics in oncology: Making precision medicine possible
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2023Eric Aboagye
exaly

