UNLIMITED

Nautilus

How Doctors Use Poetry

One part of the Hippocratic Oath, the vow taken by many physicians, requires us to “remember that there is art to medicine as well as science, and that warmth, sympathy, and understanding may outweigh the surgeon’s knife or the chemist’s drug.”  When I, along with my medical school class, recited that oath at my white coat ceremony a year ago, I admit that I was more focused on the biomedical aspects than the “art.” I bought into the mechanism of insulin lowering blood sugar. I bought into the concept of diabetes-induced kidney damage. I bought into the idea of small intestinal bacterial overgrowth in patients with diabetes. But art’s—poetry’s—role in the modern practice of medicine?

I’ve changed my mind. Physicians are beginning to understand that the role of language and human expression in

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Nautilus

Nautilus9 min read
How Big Is Your Family?
In the spring of 1987, I stooped over the desk in my shared student office in Cambridge, England, running my finger across a map of Papua New Guinea and squinting at the tiny typescript. I was trying to establish the location of a cluster of tribes i
Nautilus3 min read
The Genius of Benjamin Franklin
1 Franklin Used Humor to Engage the Public I caught myself smiling as Franklin revealed his wry humor, which he used to make his points more engaging. Even as a teenager, when he was secretly writing newspaper columns as Silence Dogood, a middle-aged
Nautilus4 min read
How To Read A Tsunami
“I work with bait fishing, and I was at the beach on my way to work when the tsunami hit. While preparing for the day’s work, I heard some kind of noise. Everyone turned and looked toward the sea. I saw it too. The water came as high as a cloud.” —Ar

Related Books & Audiobooks