Learning how to listen
Megan Griffin explores how the listening skills gained as a professional musician have benefited her practice as a medical doctor.
Megan Griffin explores how the listening skills gained as a professional musician have benefited her practice as a medical doctor.
Adam Hayden reviews Nigel Nicholson and Nathan Selden’s The Rhetoric of Medicine: Lessons on Professionalism from Ancient Greece (Oxford University Press, 2019). Co-authors Nigel Nicholson and Nathan Selden might strike you as an odd couple. Nicholson is a
in-Training: hahtories from Tomorrow’s Physicians, edited by Ajay Major and Aleena Paul (Pager Publications, Inc., 2016). I was interested to review in-Training because it provides a collection of contemporary students’ perspectives of medical training in
‘What Patients Teach: The Everyday Ethics of Health Care’ by Larry R. Churchill, Joseph B. Fanning, and David Schenck (Oxford University Press, 2013). These three authors from Vanderbilt University share a long standing engagement with