This unique book presents in a single collection around 50 essays by Dr John Launer on reflective practice in medicine, including examples specific to medical education and multi-professional healthcare.
Autorentext
John Launer is Training Programme Director for Educational Innovation, North London Specialty School of General Practice, Health Education England, London, UK. He is a well-known medical educator and writer. He was for many years Associate Dean for Multi-Professional Faculty Development at Health Education England, London, UK.
Inhalt
Foreword
Preface: On Reflection
Acknowledgements
PART 1: LEARNING TO COMMUNICATE
Conversations Inviting Change
The Three-Second Consultation
The Big Picture
Family Matters
Three Kinds of Reflection
What's the Point of Reflective Writing?
Digging Holes and Weaving Tapestries: Two Approaches to the Clinical Encounter
Why You Should Talk to Yourself: Internal Dialogue and Reflective Practice
PART 2: CONCEPTS AND THEORIES
Thinking in Three Dimensions
Making Meaning
Who Owns Truth?
Double Binds and Strange Loops
The Science of Compassion
Guidelines and Mindlines
Complexity Made Simple
PART 3: SUPERVISION
Super Vision
What Does Good Supervision Look Like?
Supervision Quartets
Collaborative Learning Groups
Clinical Case Discussion Using a Reflecting Team
The Irresistible Rise of Interprofessional Supervision
Supervision as Therapy
PART 4: EMOTIONS AND ATTITUDES
On Kindness
Power and Powerlessness
The Many Faces of Professionalism
Unconscious Incompetence
Clinical Gist
Rudeness and Respect in Medicine
Hunting for Medical Errors: Asking 'What Have We Got Wrong Today?'
Whatever Happened to Silence?
PART 5: TECHNIQUES AND TEAMWORK
Good Questions
Meetings with Teams
Giving Feedback to Medical Students and Trainees: Rules, Guidance, and Realities
Why Doctors Should Draw Genograms- Including Their Own
Socratic Questions and Frozen Shoulders: Teaching without Telling
Concentric Conversations
PART 6: NARRATIVE PRACTICE
Why Narrative?
Right on Cue
Narrative Diagnosis
Therapeutic Dialogue
Medicine as Poetry
Patient Choice and Narrative Ethics
The Yin and Yang of Medical Conversations
PART 7: PROVOCATIONS
Medically Unexplored Stories
Taking Risks Seriously
Dumpling Soup
Is There a Crisis in Clinical Consultations?
Patients as Ethnographers
Docsplaining
Against Diagnosis
Author's Note
Index