The groups of people who practice narrative medicine.
What are doctors, nurses, therapists, and health activists?
The physical and biochemical response we have to emotions.
What is psychological?
The narrator of Flowers for Algernon.
Who is Charlie?
The consideration of ethical issues emerging from advances in biology and medicine.
What is bioethics?
The illness the patient has in "The Way We Live Now."
What is HIV/AIDS?
A medical approach that utilizes people's narratives in clinical practice, research, and education as a way to promote healing.
What is narrative medicine?
The response to emotions that creates actions.
What is behavioral?
The decade when Flowers for Algernon was published, known for its technological advancements and the development of medical subspecialties, including neuropsychiatry.
What is the 1960s?
Our #1 responsibility when creating ethical research.
What is centering the well-being of the patient/participant?
How Susan Sontag leaves the end of "The Way We Live Now."
What is vague (or open-ended)?
What narrative medicine is built upon.
What is a mutual co-receptivity and vulnerability?
The cognitive or rational response we have to emotions.
What is intellectual?
A careful and purposeful reading of a text.
What is close reading?
Cloning, gene therapy, and euthanasia are all examples of...
What is bioethical issues?
The name of the patient from "The Way We Live Now."
What is anonymous?
Narrative medicine provides a forum for these two outcomes.
What is thoughtful self-reflection and radical empathy for others?
The role of emotions in narrative medicine.
What is create emotional intelligence, increasing compassion, or emotional regulation?
The type of professional imagery Keyes uses in the following paragraph:
"Standing there with her coat open, she was superimposed as a double exposure on the picture of the middle-aged woman just out of the bathtub, holding open her bathrobe for Charlie to see..."
What is photography?
To generate useful knowledge about human health and illness, and ways to prevent, diagnose, and treat disease.
What is the first goal of clinical research?
The way the patient tries to preserve his experience.
What is writing down his story?
Two peer-reviewed and proven outcomes of narrative medicine.
What is improved patient-centered care and reduction in practitioner stress?
The role of emotions in fiction.
What is create a connection between the narrator and reader? (understand their POV)
The narrator of "The Way We Live Now."
Who is an anonymous third-person narrator?
Where bioethical issues play out.
What is the medical field, sciences, philosophy, or human experience?
The game metaphor Dukes used in lecture to describe how Sontag write the dialogue in "The Way We Live Now."
What is Telephone?