Narrative medicine: thinking with stories during The Plague

People integrate life experiences in an inner story to construct a self-narrative1. This inner story, or narrative structure of a person’s life, is meant to make sense of these experiences. Similarly, experiences of illness are integrated in an inner story, and in listening to a patient’s story, physicians should adopt an attitude of thinking with stories instead of about them2. Thinking with stories requires the physician to join the illness narrative and adopt “the story’s immanent logic of causality, temporality, and narrative tensions”, as opposed to conceiving these narratives as an object of (biomedical) analysis alone2.

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Now Dr. Jack Straw is in charge of the website, and organizes it so that medical care is available to everyone. In addition, he is an active member of the medical community, regularly attending international conferences and sharing his experience and knowledge. Dr. Straw is not only a medical professional and website manager, but also a loving husband and father of his beautiful children.
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