Title: The Lost Art of Storytelling in Nursing
1The Lost Art of Storytelling in Nursing
- Glenda Kaminski,
- PhD, RN, AOCN, CRNI
- Lakeland Regional Medical Center
- Florida Southern College
2Those of us with small ones
- Once Upon a Time . . .
- Is what we think about when
- Storytelling is mentioned
3Those of us who are older
- If youve heard this story before,
- Dont stop me,
- Because Id like to hear it again.
- Groucho Marx
(1890 1977) -
4Concept of Storytelling
- What is it????
- Essential to expression of the importance of our
lives - Fundamental form of communication
- Ancient tradition
- Narrative account
Why?
5We tell stories because . . .
- Witnesses
- Knowledge of essential life events
- Significant life events
- Exemplars
- Collective voice of Nursing
- Stories add to knowledge of
- the art and science of nursing
6Purpose of Storytelling
- Preservation of history
- Transmission of values
- Building of the community of persons
- Promotion of healing
- Stories educate, motivate, and comfort others
75 Essentials of Storytelling
- Characters
- Event
- Interaction
- Setting
- Imagination
- The roots of the story are parables, rhetoric,
folk lore, psychology, anthropology
8Power of Stories
- The difference between being a Tourist
- rather than merely a Traveler
- -- Stories provide a larger world view
- Stories affirm and validate the ultimate
mysteries of life - We become the hero!!!
- We become strengthened
- in our failures
- -- We acknowledge those who
- often go unacknowledged!
9Attentively Embracing Story (Smith Liehr, 1999)
10Attentively Embracing Story
- Connecting with Self-in-Relation
- Personal history
- Reflective awareness
- Intentional Dialogue
- Presence
- Attentive embrace of story
- Creating Ease
- Flow in the midst of anchoring
11Exemplars
- Trauma patient trying to make sense of the event
that culminated in ICU admission - Pregnant high schooler
- Middle-ager facing his mortality since being
diagnosed with a chronic illness
12Benefits of Sharing a Story
- Clear perspective on personal experience and
feelings is gained, which brings greater meaning
to ones life - Cherished experiences and insights are shared
with others - Joy, satisfaction, and inner peace are gained in
sharing the story with others
Russell Timmons (2009)
13Encouraging Storytelling by Vulnerable Others
- There are many reasons for vulnerable people to
tell their stories. - Helps the patient come to understand their
experience, legitimise their behavior and share
their emotional experience with others. - Stories of people in physical or mental pain, or
of those who experience illness and disability,
are not often heard. - In the telling of stories, patients have the
potential to regain the power to shape their own
world and identity.
14Healing Effects of Shared Stories
- Sharing Memory
- Connecting with another
- Recognizing Trust and Hope
- Creating Reality
- Visioning the future
15You can inspire and educate others by beginning
to develop your own collection of favorite
stories!
- Who told you the stories?
- What made them meaningful?
- What emotions are evoked when you recall the
story? - Could this story be used to motivate or inspire
another?
16In the Clinical Setting
- What learning outcomes do you hope
- for when you use storytelling with
- Patients? Families? Other nurses?
- How do you assess these outcomes?
- What has the response been to your storytelling?
- How do you decide when to use
- storytelling?
- What challenges did you encounter in
- telling or listening to stories in the
- clinical area?
17Implications for Research
- How does ones story bear on their
- Strategies for decision making?
- Trust reliance on support systems?
- Treatment selections?
- Response to interventions?
- Framework of narrative nursing
- Patient engaging in intentional dialogue
- Mutual goal-setting
- Patient and staff satisfaction
- Bridge between hi tech and hi touch
18Questions?
19References
- Cangelosi, P. R., Sorrell, J. M. (2008).
Storytelling as an educational strategy for older
adults with chronic illness. Journal of
Psychosocial Nursing, 46(7), 19-22. - Charon, R. (2006). Narrative medicine Honoring
the stories of illness. New York, NY Oxford
University Press - Liehr, P. Smith, M.J. (2000). Using story
theory to guide nursing practice. International
Journal for Human Caring, 4(2), 13-18. - Smith, M.J. Liehr, P. (1999). Attentively
Embracing Story A middle-range theory with
practice and research implications. Scholarly
Inquiry for Nursing Practice An International
Journal, 13(3), 187-204. - Sunwolf (2005). Rx storytelling, prn
- Stories as medicine. Interdisciplinary
- Journal of Storytelling Studies, 1(2), 1-10.
20References
- Holm, A. K., Lepp, M., Ringsberg, K. C. (2005).
Dementia. Involving patients in storytelling a
caring intervention. Journal of Clinical Nursing,
14, 256-263. - Ibarra, H., Lineback, K. (2005). Whats your
story? Harvard Business Review, 83(1), 1-9. - Russell, C. Timmons, S. (2009). Life story work
and nursing home residents with dementia. Nursing
Older People, 21(4), 28-32. - Williams, S. L (2009). Recovering from the
psychological impact of intensive care How
constructing a story helps. Nursing in Critical
Care, 14, 281-288.