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295


The beauty of medical language

Ofri, Danielle
PMID: 35279252
ISSN: 1474-547x
CID: 5284582

A System Overwhelmed by a Pandemic: The New York Response

Chapter by: Mitzman, Brian; Ratner, Samantha; Lerner, Barron H
in: Difficult decisions in surgical ethics : an evidence-based approach by Lonchyna, Vassyl A; Kelley, Peggy; Angelos, Peter [Eds]
Cham : Springer, [2022]
pp. 647-658
ISBN: 9783030846244
CID: 5339892

[S.l.] : KevinMD.com, 2021

Emotional epidemiology of disease is as critical as clinical epidemiology

Ofri, Danielle
(Website)
CID: 5284692

Redefining Women's Work : The relief of suffering was one means to a great end

Ofri, Danielle
ORIGINAL:0015705
ISSN: 0003-0937
CID: 5284622

Florence Nightingale in the age of Covid-19

Ofri, Danielle
ORIGINAL:0015704
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5284612

Heidi Larson, Vaccine Anthropologist : The world’s richest countries are now its most vaccine-hesitant. Can we learn to trust our shots before the next pandemic?

Ofri, Danielle
ORIGINAL:0015708
ISSN: 0028-792x
CID: 5284652

Judging Medicine's Past: A Lesson in Professionalism

Lerner, Barron H
PMID: 34126029
ISSN: 1539-3704
CID: 4924632

My 'postmortem' folder and the intensely personal nature of the latest Covid-19 surge

Ofri, Danielle
ORIGINAL:0015703
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5284602

COVID duets

Ofri, Danielle
PMCID:7825990
PMID: 33485439
ISSN: 1474-547x
CID: 4766702

"The Spirit Thickened": Making the Case for Dance in the Medical Humanities

Shevzov-Zebrun, Nina; Barchi, Elizabeth; Grogan, Katie
In comparison to other art forms, dance remains underrepresented in the medical humanities, especially within the academic medical setting. Several factors, including perceived lack of applicability to patient care, contribute to this pattern. This paper contends that, to the contrary, learners across the medical education spectrum stand to gain much from engaging with the movement arts, including improvement of clinically-relevant skills such as physical self-awareness, observation, communication, and mindfulness. This paper makes the case for the nascent subdiscipline of Movement and Medicine, developed by the authors and piloted for inclusion in medical humanities curricula within a medical education context. Movement and Medicine employs a dance-inspired pedagogy to a) promote awareness of personal movement and embodiment tendencies and b) harness that awareness to gain more profound, sensory insight into the embodied experiences of others-experiences of health, illness, or otherwise. This work outlines the research, rationale, and philosophy behind Movement and Medicine; concretely defines the subdiscipline and situates it within the medical humanities landscape; proposes practical approaches to engaging with and applying this material; and describes a Movement and Medicine course developed for one American medical school.
PMID: 32974770
ISSN: 1573-3645
CID: 4627532