Trisha Greenhalgh, Professor of Primary Health Care and Director, Healthcare Innovation and Policy Unit, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, London, UK.
1.Why study narrative?.
2.Turtles all the way down.
Illness stories.
3.Themedian isn't the message.
4.The night my life changed.
5.The good bleed guide.
6.Stories of dying.
7.Have i got epilepsy or has it got me?.
Filler: the conker tree.
Narrative in medicine.
8.Pain narratives.
9.Following hte story: continuity of care in general practice.
10.Narrative and mental health.
11.Sirens, stray dogs and the narrative of hilda thomson.
12.The surgeon's narrative.
Filler: pressuring mrs thomas to accept her treatment.
Learning and teaching narrative.
13.Literature in medicine.
14.Teaching humanities in the undergraduate medical curriculum.
15.The golden narrative in british medicine.
16.Nursing, narrative and the moral imagination.
Filler: Upwardly mobile.
Understanding narrative in health care.
17.Stories that we hear and stories we tell.
18.Narrative in psychotherapy.
19.The narrative in medical record.
20.Anecdote in clinical practice.
Filler: Dead notes.
Broader perspectives on narrative in health care.
21.Narrative in medical ethics.
22.Cross cultural medical narratives: some case studies from latvia and siberia.
23.The narrative stream in medical negligence.
24.Narrative based medicine in an evidence based world.
Filler: Dear tom