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Trisha Paul. What are Illness Narratives?. “Expressions of the experience of being ill” Can take many forms (art, film, dance, etc.) Can be told from a variety of perspectives (Health professionals, loved ones, etc.). Literary Illness Narratives about Cancer. The Idea.
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What are Illness Narratives? • “Expressions of the experience of being ill” • Can take many forms (art, film, dance, etc.) • Can be told from a variety of perspectives (Health professionals, loved ones, etc.)
The Idea • Explore how children with cancer express their experience through narrative: • Writing • Drawing • Speaking
1. Chronological Coherence “Sometimes I feel like this experience will never end. But I know it will. Having my friends makes me want to keep on going. Friends are forever.”
2. Distance and Creation of Self “A picture that shows my mind when it is confused.”
3. Emotional Expression/Empowerment “This is how I feel about what has happened to me.”
4. Making Sense of Illness “The necklace is mostly blue because our planet is mostly water, then green for all plant life and finally the smallest…the white for ALL living creatures, including human beings, because we need to remember how small we really are in the whole scope of things”
Goals • Explore how children conceptualize cancer • Analyze representations/associations children use to understand their illness • Observe how expression through narrative functions as a therapeutic process
Current Status • IRB application submitted • Preparation for recruitment • Data collection begins in July • Begin with pilot study of about 40 kids • Longitudinal study • IRB filed for 2 years, 100 kids
Participants • Pediatric Oncology patients at Mott • Inpatients • Outpatients • Ages 10-17 • Basic understanding of their illness • Interested in opening up about their illness
Participant Benefits • Empowered to tell the story of their cancer • Create and keep their storybook narrative • Opportunity to publish their narratives
Participant Risks • Psychological discomfort from discussing cancer • No uncomfortable questions will be asked • Patients can skip questions that make them uncomfortable
Recruitment- Referrals • Pediatric Oncology Care Team referrals: • Physicians • Nurses • Nurse Practitioners • Social Workers • Child Life Specialists
Before Activity • Complete Informed Consent • Obtain written parent consent • Begin recording • Child oral assent
Activity • Sit down with each child • Child can tell their story as they wish through: • Writing • Drawing • Speaking • If need encouragement, ask prompting questions to guide child
Activity- Prompts • Diagnosis • Symptoms • Hospital • Treatment • Advice • Reflections
Post-Activity Survey 1. How does this activity make you feel? 2. Does writing make you feel better? Why? • Drawing? • Speaking? 3. Which form did you prefer? 4. Why did you prefer this method?
After Activity- Researchers • Scan narratives • Return hard copies to patients • Store digital copies with recordings on secure laptop • Patient confidentiality • Number assigned to narratives for analysis
Data Analysis- Literary • How do children conceptualize cancer? • What invisible scars of cancer become visible through narrative? • How do children understand medical terminology? • How do narratives differ by a child’s diagnosis and stage in treatment?
Data Analysis- Statistical • Is writing, drawing, or speaking therapeutic? • Which medium did children prefer? • What was different about each form of expression?
After Activity- Patients • Keep hard copy of narrative • $20 gift card for compensation • Opportunity to publish their story
Opportunity to Publish • Collaboration with MPublishing • Children choose disclosure
Further Research • Analyze artistic representations of cancer • Transcribe and analyze recorded narratives • Explore other mediums (ex. Video) • Create iBook compilation of narratives • iPad friendly format for kids • Multimedia (text, audio, video)
Conclusions • Narratives are important and inherent in medicine • How children tell their story can provide insight into how illness has affected them • Only in appreciating these unique experiences, I believe, can we work together to treat the many facets of cancer.
Special Thanks to Supporters • Dr. RajenMody (PedsHeme/Onc) • Dr. Alexander Blackwood (Peds ID) • Melanie Yergeau (English) • JenniGretzema (Child Life) • Donovan Bowerbank(Child Life) • J.J. Bouchard (Child Life)
Narrative medicine is an ever-growing field. In what ways can technology be incorporated in this field, and with what implications?
How can these narrative understandings be implemented for educational and training purposes of health care professionals?
How can we raise awareness of narratives amidst the health system?
How could we spread this awareness of narratives globally? How can technology play a role in this?
What are the sensitivities we need to consider in sharing these personal stories?