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Reading is fundamental
The article focuses on Quiello's planned discussion series at Middletown's Russell Library, and what the series suggests about the links between literature and health care. The article includes quotes from Quiello and librarian Suzanne Elliott. There is some background on Quiello, but little fluff, and little to criticize in its portrayal of nursing. In the analytical spirit of Quiello's own work, we will note that the piece's headline arguably suggests there is something inconsistent or at least remarkable about being a "professor" and a "nurse." Of course, there are thousands of nursing professors. It might have been better to call Quiello an "English professor." And the piece is more vague about her nursing than about her literary career. We learn that she got her masters in literature at Wesleyan and her doctorate at the University of Connecticut, and that she now teaches at Southern. We don't learn where she got her undergraduate degree in nursing (merely that she was accepted at Yale's nursing school, presumably for some kind of graduate work), or any details of her current work as a home care nurse.
The article says that Quiello's own dual focus "yielded her exploration of the relationship between literature and medicine." The series, "Literature and the Nature of Illness and Loss," features three discussion sessions: "Knowledge and Power," based on the play "Wit" (which the piece oddly fails to note is by Margaret Edson); "Life Cycles," based on Leo Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Illyich; and "Fate," based on Oliver Sacks's The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat. Quiello offers a short explanation for the inclusion of each of these, noting, for instance, that Tolstoy's work "takes us through the whole grieving process," and that Sacks's book on neurodiseases brings out "the strength of the human spirit in the face of illness." Quiello reportedly wants to "explore the strong link between literature and medicine and what it is like to confront illness, to care for the sick and to grieve," and to "engender new approaches to critical thinking about illness and more importantly the human condition." At the end of the piece, Quiello explains how literature might help people in their responses to illness and death:
Of course, this method of developing empathy could also be of great help to nurses and other health professionals. Indeed, quotes from Suzanne Elliott, the community services librarian in charge of adult programs, bring that out:
We do find it interesting that the piece includes this discussion of efforts to "humanize" physicians through literature, but nothing about nurses, when the piece is mainly about a nurse and literature professor. What about nursing schools? Have Quiello or others taken steps to increase humanities study in nursing programs? Or is there a feeling that nurses are already "compassionate" enough? Of course, even if that were so, we would argue that the other benefits of textual analysis are more than enough to justify including some such work in nursing programs. In fact, the piece includes good quotes from Quiello that directly address how the study of literature has made her a better health professional:
This is a great point. Of course, in suggesting that literature and nursing are "the same," Quiello is probably overstating it a bit. Presumably few readers are able to actually intervene to improve the lives of the characters they meet in books, though they could perhaps use their literary "assessments" to become more informed and able "care givers" in their real lives. Moreover, we hear how literature helps Quiello be a better nurse; does nursing help her understand literature? We would also argue that looking closely at literature and other texts can help nurses be better advocates for patients and themselves. The more practice nurses get in analyzing and responding to text, the more practice they will get in analyzing and formulating responses to what is going around them, from their patients' conditions, to their own working conditions, to the way they are regarded and treated by society as a whole. For instance, this could help nurses assess media and other statements that ostensibly support their work, but that may in fact promote damaging stereotypes, such as that of the virtuous but unskilled angel or the handmaiden. Of course, we realize it would not be easy to incorporate significant amounts of such training into many current nurse training programs, which must work hard to convey increasingly complex technical care information with limited resources. We commend Shannon Becker and the Middletown Press for this piece. See the article "Professor, nurse to lead novel discussion series" by Shannon Becker in the March 1, 2007 edition of the MIddletown Press.
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The URL for this page is www.nursingadvocacy.org/news/2007/mar/16_healthstyles.html |
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