OTHR-27. Narrative Medicine Applied: A Study Elucidating How One Neuro-Oncology Team Grapples With Distress

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2024-06-18
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American English
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Oxford University Press
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Absorbing the cumulative weight of neuro-oncology patient stories in isolation leads providers to experience burnout and distress that some in our study called “debilitating.” Sands, Stanley, & Charon (2008) describe the field of pediatric oncology as one that “taunts professionals with the random unfairness” of grave childhood illness. They reason that clinicians in this demanding field may benefit from narrative training to build empathy, teamwork, and resilience. Narrative medicine is a rigorous and evidence-based field of study that utilizes the method of close reading of literature and art to engage providers in discussion and personal reflection. In narrative medicine workshops, participants immerse themselves in a text or image, contemplate their experiences and their relation to the text, write in response to a prompt, and share their writings with one another (Charon, et al., 2017).

METHODS: This study sought to understand how narrative medicine workshops conducted in a pediatric neuro-oncology clinical setting impacted individual team members, as well as inter- and intra-team relationships. Data collection for the study included pre- and post-surveys, qualitative interviews, and observation notes recorded by workshop facilitators. Researchers applied Clark’s (2014) framework of three distinct levels – relationship to oneself, relationship to the patient, and relationship to others on the team – to development of pre- and post-survey and qualitative interview questions.

RESULTS: Although quantitative data failed to demonstrate that the workshops reduced participant distress, qualitative research generated evidence that the very act of participating in narrative medicine workshops provided a safe space for providers to discuss job-related distress, breaking down hierarchical barriers and moving them toward what one participant called “professional intimacy.”

CONCLUSIONS: This research suggests that engaging in narrative medicine practice as a healthcare team may in and of itself alleviate distress and foster healing dialogue in a stressful clinical environment suffused with pain and loss.

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Riley K, Toback AL, Knight K, et al. OTHR-27. NARRATIVE MEDICINE APPLIED: A STUDY ELUCIDATING HOW ONE NEURO-ONCOLOGY TEAM GRAPPLES WITH DISTRESS. Neuro Oncol. 2024;26(Suppl 4):0. Published 2024 Jun 18. doi:10.1093/neuonc/noae064.697
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Neuro-Oncology
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PMC
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