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Beyond catharsis: the nuanced emotion of patient storytellers in an educational role
Author(s) -
Roebotham Taylor,
Hawthornthwaite Lisa,
Lee Lauren,
Lingard Lorelei A
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
medical education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.776
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1365-2923
pISSN - 0308-0110
DOI - 10.1111/medu.13510
Subject(s) - catharsis , psychology , medline , psychotherapist , social psychology , psychoanalysis , political science , law
Context As health care organisations seek to cultivate patient and family‐centred care, patient storytelling has emerged as a valued educational resource. However, repeatedly harnessing patient perspectives to educate health care professionals may have consequences. We need robust insight into what it means to be a patient storyteller in order to ensure ethical and appropriate engagement with patients as an educational resource. Methods Constructivist grounded theory was used to explore the experience of patients involved in a storytelling curriculum as part of hospital staff continuing education. All 33 storytellers were invited by e‐mail to participate in the study. Twenty‐six storytellers responded to the invitation, and 25 could be scheduled to participate. Using theoretical sampling, semi‐structured interviews were conducted and analysed in a process that was inductive, iterative and comparative. Results Participants described the central role of emotions in their storytelling experience, which varied from 1 to 25 tellings over a period of 1 month to 2 years. These emotions were shaped by the passage of time, repetition of storytelling and audience acknowledgement. However, emotion remained unpredictable and had lingering implications for storytellers’ vulnerability. Conclusion The multiple storytelling experiences of our participants and ongoing educational nature of their role provides unique insight into how emotions ebb and flow across tellings, how emotions can be both a surprise and a rhetorical strategy, and how emotions are influenced by audience acknowledgement. These findings contribute to an emerging conversation regarding the power and politics of selecting and using storytellers for organisational purpose. Implications include how we support patient storytellers in educational roles and how we can sustainably integrate patient storytelling into health professional education.