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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Gabriele Lucius-Hoene (Professor, Professor, Department of Rehabilitation psychology and psychotherapy, University of Freiburg, Germany) , Christine Holmberg (Professor of Social Medicine and Epidemiology, Professor of Social Medicine and Epidemiology, Medical School Brandenburg Theodor Fontane) , Thorsten Meyer (Professor, Professor, Integrative Rehabilitation Research Unit and Institute of Epidemiology, Hannover Medical School, Germany)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 17.30cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 24.70cm Weight: 0.666kg ISBN: 9780198806660ISBN 10: 0198806663 Pages: 384 Publication Date: 19 October 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. 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Table of ContentsSection 1: Introduction 1: Gabriele Lucius-Hoene, Christine Holmberg and Thorsten Meyer: Introduction: Chances and problems of illness narratives Section 2: Methodological and epistemological challenges 2: Gabriele Lucius-Hoene, Martina Breuning and Cornelia Helfferich: Illness narratives in practice: which questions do we have to face when collecting and using them? 3: Janka Koschack and Wolfgang Himmel: The researchers' role in re-constructing patient narratives to present them as patient experiences 4: Lars-Christer Hydén: Stories, illness and narrative norms 5: Thorsten Meyer and Margret Xyländer: Choices of illness narratives in practice: applying ideas of sampling and generalizability Section 3: Ethical and communicational aspects of using narratives in medicine 6: Hille Haker: Illness Narratives in Counselling - Narrative Medicine and Narrative Ethics 7: Maya Lavie-Ajayi and Ora Nakash: An Illness Narrative or a Social Injustice Narrative? Section 4: Narratives in psychotherapy, rehabilitation and vocational training 8: Sabine Corsten and Friedericke Hardering: Retelling one's life story - Using narratives to improve quality of life in case of chronic language impairment 9: Peter Frommelt, Maria I. Medved, and Jens Brockmeier: Narrative practice, Neurotrauma, and Rehabilitation 10: Ernst von Kardoff: Illness narratives in the workplace Section 5: Narratives in training of communication and empathy 11: Alexander Kiss and Claudia Steiner: Using narratives for Medical Humanities in medical training 12: Yon Ok Jung, Gabriele Lucius-Hoene and Yong Ik Bak: Narratives for training doctors in Korea 13: Alexander Palant and Wolfgang Himmel: How to use illness narratives in medical education: First teaching experiences with the German DIPEx website project 14: Paula McDonald: Using patient narratives as source material for creative writing 15: Chris Heape, Henry Larsen, and Merja Ryöppy: Engaging the Vulnerable Encounter: engendering narratives for change in healthcare practice by using participatory theatre methods 16: Joyce Lamerichs and Manna Alma: Drawing on narrative accounts of dementia in education and care Section 6: Narratives in diagnostics 17: Elisabeth Gülich: Using illness narratives in clinical diagnosis: narrative reconstruction of epileptic and non-epileptic seizures and panic attacks 18: Christian Rösler: Structural Dream Analysis: a narrative methodology for investigating the meaning of dream series and their development in the course of psychotherapy Section 7: Narratives in decision making 19: Christine Holmberg: What's in a name: anecdotes, experience, and the meaning of stories 20: Victoria A. Shaffer and Brian J. Zikmund-Fisher: Narratives in decision aids: A controversy Section 8: Narratives in health care 21: Lisa Hinton, Louise Locock and Sue Ziebland: Understanding and using health experiences to improve healthcare - examples from the United Kingdom 22: Susan Law, Ilja Ormel, David Loutfi and John Lavis: Illness narratives as evidence for healthcare policy 23: Rachel Grob and Mark Schlesinger: When Public and Private Narratives Diverge: Media, Policy Advocacy, and the Paradoxes of Newborn Screening Policy Section 9: Illness narratives in the media 24: Eleonora Massa and Valentina Simeoni: Pregnancy 2.0: A Corpus-based Case Study for the Analysis of Illness Narratives Online 25: Erez C. Miller and Amos Fleischman: Changes in Authenticity: Perceptions of Parents and Youth with ADHD of the Effects of Stimulant Medication 26: Matthias Bandtel: Illness narratives in political communication: instrumental, institutional, and social functions of political actors' public illness accountsReviewsAuthor InformationGabriele Lucius-Hoene is a retired professor and psychotherapeut at the Department of Rehabilitation Psychology, Institute of Pschology, University of Freiburg. Her research interests are narrative and conversational analysis of life stories, especially illness narratives, and the ways people construct their identities and cope with challenges and suffering by telling their stories. Christine Holmberg is Professor of Social Medicine and Epidemiology at the Medical School Brandenburg Theodor Fontane. She was trained in anthropology at Humboldt University Berlin and Harvard Medical School, and in epidemiology at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Her research interests include the influence of medical and statistical technologies on patient narratives, experiences, and decision making. Thorsten Meyer is Professor of Rehabilitation Sciences and has recently become a member of the Faculty of Public Health at the University of Bielefeld, Germany. Trained as a psychologist, he has worked in different health research departments (social psychiatry, social medicine, rehabilitation) in Germany and Switzerland. He currently serves as a speaker of the Qualitative Research Working Group with the German Network on Health Services Research. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |