Abstract
As evidenced in literature, physicians vary in their emotional devotion to patients. John Steinbeck's physicians are aloof. The doctors of William Carlos Williams and Richard Selzer form strong, complicated, emotional attachments to their patients. These attachments allow them to live fuller, more sensuous lives, without interfering with their proper functioning as healthcare providers. F. Scott Fitzgerald's Dr. Diver overly commits himself to a patient and suffers the consequences. The present-day physician can help modulate his own emotional connections to patients by examining these literary models.
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Lehman, D. Physicians in literature: Emotional approaches to patients. J Med Hum 12, 65–72 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01142870
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01142870