|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
For nearly three decades, Sandra Bertman has been exploring the
power of the arts and belief--symbols, metaphors, stories--to
alleviate psychological and spiritual pain not only of patients,
grieving family members, and affected communities but also of the
nurses, clergy and physicians who minister to them. Her training
sessions and clinical interventions are based on the premise that
bringing out the creative potential inherent in each of us is just
as relevant-- perhaps more so--as psychiatric theory and treatment
models since grief and loss are an integral part of life. Thus,
this work was compiled to illuminate the many facets that link
grief, counseling, and creativity. The multiple strategies
suggested in these essays will help practitioners enlarge their
repertoire of hands-on skills and foster introspection and empathy
in readers.
What started in the mid-seventies as brown-bag lunchtime optional
seminars for students, faculty, and staff of the (then) University
of Massachusetts Medical Center evolved into a magnificent project.
The medical students' courageous willingness to acknowledge their
feelings about death and dissection has made this book possible. It
is our hope that this slim volume - this collection of words and
images created by the medical students at University of
Massachusetts during the last thirty years (and augmented by Meryl
Levin's documentary photographs of students from Weill Medical
College of Cornell University and their journal entries written in
1998 and published in "Anatomy of Anatomy") - will provide you with
what good doctors provide for their patients: catharsis, personal
insights, and support. From the Foreword: 'One of the enduring
images of my first year in medical school is the narrow, unshaven
face of Ernest, the cadaver I shared with three classmates whose
names I can't remember. We named him 'Ernest', so we could impress
our parents by telling them how we were working in dead earnest. In
reality, like most cadavers in those days, he was an anonymous
indigent man who died in the county home and whose remains were
used for our education without his consent. My group was considered
lucky because cancer had burned away every bit of Ernest's fat,
thus making him an excellent 'specimen' for dissection. Even then I
knew that Ernest was more than a specimen, but it took a long time
to understand that he was actually my first mentor in the joys and
sorrows and successes and failures of medicine. Surprisingly, it
was Ernest rather than my basic science professors - the living
ones, that is - who provoked the most important questions about
what it means to be a doctor and forced me to confront them. As I
recall, though, this was a solitary process because my classmates
and I never discussed, or perhaps even admitted to ourselves, our
feelings of ambivalence, fear, pain, gratitude, and exultation, or
the changes in us as persons during the first year of medical
school. We tried to hide all this because at the time that's what
doctors were supposed to do. Today things are different. As
students at UMass, you are especially privileged to have a module
like "One Breath Apart" integrated into your anatomy experience.
This module provides you the opportunity to explore and share your
personal responses to dissection, and with this publication it
gives you access to an additional resource: a splendid introduction
to the written and visual tradition established by UMass students
over the last two decades, along with evocative photographs and
journal entries from the medical students at Cornell, documented by
Meryl Levin in "Anatomy of Anatomy". As I read through this book, I
was struck by the Nancy Long's title poem. She writes, 'I pretended
you were here/To teach me the details'. How reminiscent of my own
experience those words are! 'Then I saw your face/And I knew...'
That's the turning point. As physicians we can either embark on the
journey of learning to see others' faces and to hold their hands,
or we can attempt to distance ourselves and focus only on
'details'. This is a decision that every medical student must make,
and our cadavers present the first difficult challenge. In a 2006
class poem, UMass students wrote, 'We felt the brain/And imagined
its power to create. We held the heart/And imagined its ability to
embrace'. These words represent an affirmation of empathy and
compassion over detachment. One of the most compelling images of
"One Breath Apart" shows the anatomy cadaver as a bridge spanning
the chasm that lies between ignorance, darkness, and death on one
side and knowledge, health, and life on the other. Dozens of tiny
figures march across the span. Like me, they won't forget the
backbone of that bridge. As another UMass student writes, 'I know
that I will be irrevocably altered" - Jack Coulehan, M.D.,
Professor of Medicine, Stoney Brook University, NY.
For nearly three decades, Sandra Bertman has been exploring the
power of the arts and belief--symbols, metaphors, stories--to
alleviate psychological and spiritual pain not only of patients,
grieving family members, and affected communities but also of the
nurses, clergy and physicians who minister to them. Her training
sessions and clinical interventions are based on the premise that
bringing out the creative potential inherent in each of us is just
as relevant-- perhaps more so--as psychiatric theory and treatment
models since grief and loss are an integral part of life. Thus,
this work was compiled to illuminate the many facets that link
grief, counseling, and creativity. The multiple strategies
suggested in these essays will help practitioners enlarge their
repertoire of hands-on skills and foster introspection and empathy
in readers.
Palliative care is dedicated to ensuring that patients experience
physical, spiritual and emotional ease as death approaches;
bereavement care supports those who are left with the difficult
task of coping after the death. The arts offer a powerful medium of
assisting people to achieve understanding and peace of mind. fears
and anxieties, and gently explore the emotional, spiritual, and
psychological issues that aid a full understanding of themselves
and their conditions. At the same time, they can serve as a way to
communicate difficult and complex feelings to professionals or
family members which cannot always be articulated in everyday
conversation. been pioneered by artists, writers, nurses,
musicians, therapists, social workers, and chaplains in palliative
care settings, and range from simple painting and writing
activities to organized communal activities like the writing and
performing of a play. inspiration for any practitioner working in a
palliative care setting.
|
|