Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated the problem of secondary trauma and moral injury for health care workers. This reality, together with the epidemic of social isolation and loneliness, has brought the mental health of health care practitioners and patients to the forefront of the national conversation. Narrative medicine is an accessible, diversity-honoring, low-cost, underutilized pedagogical framework with potentially revolutionary benefits for enhancing patient care, supporting the underserved, mitigating clinician burnout, and improving team dynamics. Herein, the authors review the literature on these benefits and then discuss methods for integrating narrative medicine into clinical care and medical education at the undergraduate and graduate levels as well as continuing medical education.

Full Text
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