When describing their symptoms, medical history, and health changes at a clinic or hospital, every patient is the storyteller of their own health. Good storytellers tend to get better health care, but a history of childhood trauma plays havoc with telling your own story. Consider Florence, as a (fictional) example: It is a hot July night and Florence is having dizzy spells again. She feels dreadful and is worried. What if it happens when she is driving? What if it doesn’t get better? How can she work like this? What if it is a stroke or a tumor? She goes to the emergency department in spite of her past experience that it isn’t very helpful. The triage nurse asks what she is there for. “Well, I had this bad thing … they did tests and it was almost normal …” The nurse looks puzzled. “When was that?” “October. I was—” …
Good Storytellers Get Better Health Care—but Childhood Trauma Confuses the Narrative
July 17, 2021
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