Dying to be Competent

Dying to be Competent

Content type: Health story

“Dying to be Competent” details Cottam’s experience with healthcare discrepancies in her experience giving birth attributed to the fact that she’s a woman of color.  Cottom describes having her physical pain be completely dismissed by healthcare professionals and claims that this resulted in the  tragic consequence of her daughter dying shortly after birth. Through her personal story, Cottom illustrates the inequalities within healthcare due to structural racism, and the grave lack of care women of color too often receive. This essay could be used in classes to further investigate the structural forces within our society and how they are subsequently intertwined with healthcare as well as how it creates marginalization and lack of care within the healthcare system. Additionally it could be used to discuss the role of unconscious biases and stereotypes within the medical field.  



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A Body, Undone: Living on After Great Pain

A Body, Undone: Living on After Great Pain

Content type: Health story

 “A Body, Undone” is a memoir by Christina Crosby, an English professor chronicling her life after a paralyzing cycling accident in 2003. A respected English professor at Wesleyan University, Crosby explores the physical and emotional pain of her disability through a critical feminist and queer thinking lens. She puts into words the experience of life in a broken body that seems beyond the reach of language and understanding, discussing how we construct a livable life in the midst of unimaginable pain. She situates her personal narrative within the broader social critiques of care labor and the financial burden of disability and injury within the current economic systems and structures in the US. The novel would be relevant to disability studies and feminist theory, but its prose that is rooted in humanity and the events of daily life function to make it accessible to a general audience . This book is a patient narrative that challenges the dominant discourse of disability, and could be relevant to discussions about disability, pain, and care and its intersections with gender, sexuality, and class.

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Acupuncture: Susan’s Story – University Hospitals

Acupuncture: Susan’s Story – University Hospitals

Content type: Health story

This minute and a half long youtube video from University Hospitals Connor Integrative Health Network tells Susan’s story, who had severe back pain from a bulging disc that severely limited her mobility. After her regular physical therapy only provided limited relief, she decided to seek out a more holistic treatment and use acupuncture along with her regular treatment. Susan, and her naturopath Lina Sbrocco, explain how acupuncture has allowed Susan to return to her daily life activities by greatly decreasing her pain. The video shows what the treatment looks like in order to demystify acupuncture, but also frames it as a last resort, and complementary to biomedicine rather than as an alternative.

Using this video in class provides a practical example of a short narrative that could stimulate discussions on complementary and alternative medicine and holistic health, as well as how medical facilities advertise using patient testimonials. The video advertises acupuncture as something that University Hospitals offers, and uses Susan’s success story to encourage patients to use their medical services.

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¿Cómo superar el duelo? Mi experiencia personal

¿Cómo superar el duelo? Mi experiencia personal

Content type: Health story

This story describes the narrator’s struggle with grief after the death of her partner in a car crash. Her persistent questions of “why did this have to happen” and “why did they deserve this” led to depression, barely getting out of bed, and friends noticing changes in personality. When she finally left her house, the fresh air convinced her to see a psychologist. She concludes that the pain never goes completely away but becomes less paralyzing over time.

At 1.5-2 pages, this is appropriate for upper intermediate Spanish learners or a community group to discuss bereavement and how therapy can help. Placement within a website that promotes therapy does forecast that therapy is the answer to problems.

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Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End.

Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End.

Content type: Health story

A contemplation of the limits of medical care through many specific stories of decision points about when to stop treatment in favor of palliative care. Gawande has been a physician for a long time and an activist/ writer on the side of “know when to say when” – i.e. just because medical technology exists to prolong life doesn’t mean that’s the best thing to do – for almost as long. He makes convincing cases for stopping expensive treatment and “giving life to days” more often than Hail Mary passes that might bring on the 2% chance of a cure.

The book is a readily accessibe read for many audiences and could be assigned in full or excerpted. It was also the subject of a PBS documentory that could be used to supplement class use and bring the text to life.

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Survivor of White House Lightning Strike Embraces third chance at life

Survivor of White House Lightning Strike Embraces third chance at life

Content type: Health story

A graduate student canvassing near the White House on 8/4/22 for a nonprofit humanitarian group (International Rescue Committee – aids people in disaster zones) was one of four people hit by a lightning strike in Lafayette Park. She was the only one to survive, despite her heart stopping twice, the second time for more than 10 minutes. She ponders the meaning of being the one to survive the experience and describes the horrible pain from burns and nerve damage that she’s still suffering from. Focuses on gratitude, learned from her aunt and uncle who died of cancer years ago but were grateful to be alive up until the end.

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Grand unified theory of female pain

Grand unified theory of female pain

Content type: Health story

Loosely connected series of observations and thoughts about women and pain, some literary, some from the author’s own experience. One theme is how often womens’ pain is ignored or downplayed as bid for attention.

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Wait times: Slipping through the cracks in the emergency room.

Wait times: Slipping through the cracks in the emergency room.

Content type: Health story

A man tells the story of watching his wife suffer agonizing pain for several hours from an ovarian torsion, eventually losing the ovary, and uses that as a starting point to describe how often women’s pain is dismissed by doctors and other caregivers, especially other women.

The story could also prompt discussion of how to account for the health care provider behavior in this story. Do we blame incompetent and insensitive health care providers? What features of their working conditions might produce the behavior this story recounts?

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