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Crossing the chiasm
sutured care in medical education
pp. 121-125
Abstract
Medical students learn to think like a doctor and act like a doctor—but how to feel like a doctor?Ironically, for a profession devoted to the study of the body, the experience of medical education can deny the physical presence of a physician's body. In this vignette, a family doctor shares her surprise at how she experienced her emotional engagement with a patient physically, through a small gesture which enabled patient and doctor to transcend the formal boundaries of their doctor-patient relationship. She reflects on the central role of the body in the expression of human caring. She wonders how medical education could re-focus on the body as perceptual to bridge the power divide between patient and physician.
Publication details
Published in:
Travis Sarah, Kraehe Amelia M., Hood Emily J., Lewis Tyson E. (2018) Pedagogies in the flesh: case studies on the embodiment of sociocultural differences in education. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 121-125
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-59599-3_18
Full citation:
Kelly Martina, Dornan Tim (2018) „Crossing the chiasm: sutured care in medical education“, In: S. Travis, A. M. Kraehe, E. J. Hood & T. E. Lewis (eds.), Pedagogies in the flesh, Dordrecht, Springer, 121–125.