Creative Writing in Health and Social CareJessica Kingsley Publishers, 2004 M03 15 - 240 páginas This book is really a must-have for therapists and others in the creative arts, so that you can see how the workings of the human mind can be displayed through the arts. Even with serious illness, the mind can talk. And that is the point of the book'. |
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... patients and doctors, with patients often not expressing their real needs. 'We are supposed to be healing them', said Dr Rice. 'But how can we if we do not know what is wrong?' 4 Chatterjee spoke in quite different terms of her work ...
... , using the reading and discussion of poetry to explore the existential issues facing dying patients and their relatives. By contrast, the practitioner and researcher John Killick discusses work EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION 19.
... patients. 5 Including, for example, Jackowska 1997, Killick and Schneider 1997, Hunt and Sampson 1998, Bolton 1999, Sampson 1999, Hunt 2000. 6 Although Lynne Alexander's (1990) collection of voices from Lancaster Hospice 'crossed over ...
... patients I discovered how common it was for patients at a nursing home not to show such feelings assadness, anger, fright and even joy.1That gave me the idea that we could read poetry together, to express and share our feelings and ...
... patients were too ill to take part. Altogether there were 41 meetings. An information pamphlet gave patients and their relatives a little knowledge about the group, and invited them to participate in a poetry group where it also would ...
Contenido
Thinking Through Practice | 117 |
The Contributors | 228 |
Useful Addresses | 231 |
Subject Index | 232 |
Author Index | 239 |