Purpose: Critical care medicine is facing an epidemic of burnout and consequent attrition. Interventions are needed to re-establish the medical field as a place of professional growth, resilience, and personal well-being. Humanities facilitate creation, reflection, and meaning-making, holding the promise of personal and community transformation.
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October 2022
Medical humanities initiatives have been integrated in our Pediatric Critical Care program to help clinicians make meaning of key experiences in their professional and personal journeys. In particular, narrative medicine and clinicians' writings illuminate and commemorate these journeys and increase our understanding of our profession in its full complexity. In this piece, we provide an example of a medical humanities curriculum and a selection of pieces written by several participants in it.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCritical care clinicians practice a liminal medicine at the border between life and death, witnessing suffering and tragedy which cannot fail to impact the clinicians themselves. Clinicians' professional identity is predicated upon their iterative efforts to articulate and contextualize these experiences, while a failure to do so may lead to burnout. This journey of self-discovery is illuminated by clinician narratives which capture key moments in building their professional identity.
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