- Empathy and Medical Education
- Patient-Provider Communication in Healthcare
- Biomedical Text Mining and Ontologies
- Innovations in Medical Education
- Clinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills
- Intimate Partner and Family Violence
- Anthropological Studies and Insights
- Complement system in diseases
- Migration, Health and Trauma
- Child Abuse and Trauma
- Healthcare professionals’ stress and burnout
- Patient Satisfaction in Healthcare
- Complementary and Alternative Medicine Studies
- Palliative Care and End-of-Life Issues
- Mentoring and Academic Development
- linguistics and terminology studies
- Mental Health and Psychiatry
- Gender, Security, and Conflict
- Social Media in Health Education
- Gender Diversity and Inequality
- Psychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments
- Grief, Bereavement, and Mental Health
- Neurological diseases and metabolism
- Neurological and metabolic disorders
- Homicide, Infanticide, and Child Abuse
Brigham and Women's Hospital
2019-2023
Harvard University
2019-2023
Lemuel Shattuck Hospital
2022-2023
Stanford University
2021
Stanford Medicine
2017
Objective We sought to investigate the concept and practices of ‘clinician presence’, exploring how physicians professionals create connection, engage in interpersonal interaction, build trust with individuals across different circumstances contexts. Design In 2017–2018, we conducted qualitative semistructured interviews 10 30 non-medical from fields protective services, business, management, education, art/design/entertainment, social legal/personal services. Setting Physicians were...
This Viewpoint, part of a new JAMA series on diagnostic excellence, explores the meaning diagnosis and ultimate goal using to provide individualized treatment art caring bring comfort patient experiencing illness.
Background and Objectives: Professionalism is essential in medical education, yet how it embodied through students’ lived experiences remains elusive. Little research exists on students perceive professionalism the barriers they encounter. This study examines attitudes toward written reflections. Methods: Family medicine clerkship at Stanford University School of Medicine answered following prompt: “Log a patient encounter which you experienced challenge or improvement opportunity.” We...
Abstract Unspeakability is a dominant analytic lens in scholarship on gendered violence India, but women can and do speak out. This article examines how Bengali complain about domestic through peter katha , the belly's word. The capacious pet (belly) seat of tension, where abuse dwells body. At clinic Kolkata, describe sensations abdominal pain, pressure, hunger to convey patterns temporalities violence. Yet complaints belly pain go unacknowledged by local clinicians. Hygiene discourses...
Venkataramani, Ranjani; Maitra, Amrapali; Hennessey, Erin; Rizvi, Adam Author Information
Our website uses cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing use our site, or clicking "Continue," you are agreeing Cookie Policy | Continue JAMA HomeNew OnlineCurrent IssueFor Authors Publications Network Open Cardiology Dermatology Health Forum Internal Medicine Neurology Oncology Ophthalmology Otolaryngology–Head & Neck Surgery Pediatrics Psychiatry Archives of (1919-1959) Podcasts Clinical Reviews Editors' Summary Medical News Author Interviews More JN Learning /...
On Being a DoctorFebruary 2022Swan SongAmrapali Maitra, MD, PhDAmrapali PhDBrigham and Women's Hospital Boston, MassachusettsSearch for more papers by this authorAuthor, Article, Disclosure Informationhttps://doi.org/10.7326/M21-4125 Audio Reading - “Swan Song” Audio. Virginia L. Hood, physician from the University of Vermont, reads Amrapali PhD Your browser does not support audio element. player progress bar Step backward in current track Play trackPause forward Mute trackUnmute 00:00/...
SUMMARY During ethnographic fieldwork in West Bengal, India, I witnessed the comingling of disgust and desire shaping religious identity, effervescent force crowds, moments ordinary ethics enacted through labor. This short story is set a fictional town: Gokulpur microcosm tension between rural idiosyncrasies urban aspirations permeated by growing right‐wing Hindu sentiments. Through evolving relationship boy his family's revered cow, explore what it means to navigate companionship,...
Ms. M. often visits the emergency department with belly pain and its cousins, but cause of her symptoms is not always clear. Each negative test result a blow to psyche.
Objective Although social and environmental factors are central to provider patient interactions, the data that reflect these can be incomplete, vague, subjective. We sought create a conceptual framework describe classify about presence, domain of interpersonal connection in medicine. Methods Our top down approach for ontology development based on concept relationality included 1) broad survey sciences literature systematic review more than 20,000 articles around medicine, 3) relational...