Neurology and literature 2

Neurologia. 2014 May;29(4):242-8. doi: 10.1016/j.nrl.2011.02.007. Epub 2011 May 5.
[Article in English, Spanish]

Abstract

Introduction: Good literary fiction has the potential to move us, extend our sense of life, transform our prospective views and help us in the face of adversity. A neurological disorder is likely to be the most challenging experience a human being may have to confront in a lifetime. As such, literary recreations of illnesses have a doubly powerful effect.

Objectives: Study the synergies between neurology and fictional literature with particular reference to narrative based medicine (NBM).

Development: Doctors establish boundaries between the normal and the abnormal. Taking a clinical history is an act of interpretation in which the doctor integrates the science of objective signs and measurable quantities with the art of subjective clinical judgment. The more discrepancy there is between the patient's experience with the illness and the doctor's interpretation of that disease, the less likely the doctor-patient interaction is to succeed. NBM contributes to a better discernment of the meanings, thus considering disease as a biographical event rather than just a natural fact. Drawing from their own experience with disease, writers of fiction provide universal insights through their narratives, whilst neuroscientists, like Cajal, have occasionally devoted their scientific knowledge to literary narratives. Furthermore, neurologists from Alzheimer to Oliver Sacks remind us of the essential value of NBM in the clinic.

Conclusions: Integrating NBM (the narrative of patients) and the classic holistic approach to patients with our current paradigm of evidence based medicine represents a challenge as relevant to neurologists as keeping up with technological and scientific advances.

Keywords: Clinical history; Historia clínica; Historia de la medicina; Humanidades médicas; Medical history; Medical humanities; Medicina basada en la narrativa; Narrative based medicine; Neuro-literature; Neuroliteratura; Neurology; Neurología.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Medicine in Literature*
  • Narration
  • Nervous System Diseases
  • Neurology*
  • Patients
  • Physicians