A Transplant Patient's Reflection on Living While Dying

An artist and organ transplant recipient considers the isolation of her own illness experience and further explores these issues in her graphic medicine comic, published in this very journal.

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Being More Than Just a White Coat

A visual artist explores the trusting relationship she shares with her psychiatrist—and how that fiduciary manifests itself through her photodrawings and studio art.

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Desensitization to the Face of Death: A reflection by poet and medical student Catherine Read

A medical student examines the desensitization that imbues the study and practice of medicine—and advocates against it.

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Repeat After Me: Questions about the brain in transition by writer Nancy Huggett

A caregiver reflects on the orienting power of repetition. and how such repetition allows us to anchor ourselves within our lived narratives.

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The Tyranny of "Normal" in healthcare and healing by Dr. Kate Otto Chebly

A physician grapples with the tyranny of “normalcy” and how its unbending dictates can stifle the clinical encounter as well as patient care.

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The Importance of Touch in Medicine (and Beyond) by neonatologist Katherine C. White

A retired neonatologist recalls her time in the NICU when the specter of HIV loomed large—and laments the precautions against touch that have returned with the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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The Lost Patient Narrative in our era of "EHR-Centered" Medicine: A Reflection by family medicine physicianJacqueline Redmer

A family medicine physician reflects on the true costs for the patient and the clinician of the increasing digitization of modern medicine.

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On "Where Are You, Mary Oliver?" A pediatric ER doctor contemplates what two poets taught her about healing

A pediatric emergency physician reflects on the enduring power and comfort of Mary Oliver’s poetry during difficult times.

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