Narrative Medicine Monday: Vicious

Tim Cunningham gives us a glimpse of Abdul, a teenage Rohingya refugee he encounters in a Bangladesh camp, in Intima‘s “Vicious.” Cunningham notes that his “belly was swollen like the rice fields” and “[t]hough described by many as non-literate because he had no official access to school, he could read the Quran with ease. His recitation of its Surahs was exquisite.”

When Cunningham meets Abdul in clinic, his pain is “everywhere,” as if “[h]is genocide had shifted internally, an annihilation of his once-healthy cells.” Abdul had lost his appetite entirely, did not “miss dahl and rice, mangos and bananas, though he knew that he should. ”

Cunningham imagines where he might transfer Abdul, had he the resources: “They would have diagnostics for his hepatomegaly and cachexia. They would have 24-hour staff, teams of nurses and physicians to treat and listen his life-story. The providers would all speak Rohingya. These thoughts were but daydreams. For extraordinary diseases, with extraordinary measures and extraordinary means, there are ways to treat illness.  If you are Rohingya, there is nothing.”

Cunningham’s prose elicits a visceral response to his patient’s physical and emotional trials, but it is Abdul’s word of response to a difficult intravenous stick that give both Cunningham and the reader pause: “Vicious.”

Writing Prompt: If you’re a medical provider, are there certain assumptions you make about a group of patients you see? How did you feel when Abdul repeatedly says “vicious?” What do you think that word might mean to him? What does it mean to you? Have you worked in a resource-poor setting or with a marginalized group of patients before? Recall an encounter with a patient. Write for 10 minutes.

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Narrative Medicine Monday: A View from the Edge

Dr. Rana Awdish is a critical care physician turned advocate for training in compassionate care following her incredible near death experience in her own hospital. Her essay “A View from the Edge” in the New England Journal of Medicine provides an overview of her 2008 experience as a critically ill patient cared for by her colleagues.

In her book “In Shock,” out this October by St. Martin’s Press, she outlines her harrowing near-death illness and recovery. I’m eager to read Awdish’s book and hear more about how her experience led to advocacy for “compassionate, coordinated care.” In her NEJM essay she describes how “small things would gut me. Receiving a bill for the attempted resuscitation of the baby, for example…. A trivial oversight, by a department ostensibly not involved in patient care, had the potential to bring me to my knees.” After recovering, Awdish channels her grueling patient experience into a drive to transform the way we receive and provide medical care. She contends “we need to reflect on times when our care has deviated from what we intended — when we haven’t been who we hoped to be. We have to be transparent and allow the failure to reshape us, to help us reset our intention and mold our future selves.”

Writing Prompt: Have you noted an erosion of empathy among medical providers? If so, think of a specific example and write about how you felt as the patient. If you’re a medical provider, have you ever been cared for by colleagues at your own hospital? What was it like to be on the “other side,” as a patient? Did you come away from the experience with new knowledge and empathy that you then incorporated into your own practice? Write for 10 minutes. 

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