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When Play Reveals the Ache: Introducing Co-constructive Patient Simulation for Narrative Practitioners in Medical Education

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Abstract

Despite the ubiquity of healthcare simulation and the humanities in medical education, the two domains of learning remain unintegrated. The stories suffused within healthcare simulation have thus remained unshaped by the developments of narrative medicine and the health humanities. Healthcare simulation, in turn, has yet to utilize concepts like co-construction and narrative competence to enrich learners’ understanding of patient experience alongside their clinical competencies. To create a conceptual bridge between these two fields (including narrative-based inquiry more broadly), we redescribe narrative competence via Ronald Heifetz’s distinction of “technical” and “adaptive” challenges outlined in his adaptive leadership model. Heifetz, we argue, enriches learners’ self-understanding of the unique demands of cultivating narrative competence, which can be both elucidated on the page and tested within the charged yet supportive simulation environment. We introduce Co-constructive Patient Simulation (CCPS) to demonstrate how working with simulated patients can support narrative work by drawing on the clinical vicissitudes of learners in the formulation and enactment of case studies. The three movements of CCPS—resensing, retelling, and retooling—told through learner experiences, describe the affinities and divergences between narrative medicine’s sequence of attention, representation, and affiliation; Montello’s three forms of narrative competence (departure, performance, change), and Heifetz’s three steps (observe, interpret, and intervene) of adaptive leadership.

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Acknowledgments

This paper was supported in part by the Riva Arielle Ritvo endowment at the Child Study Center, Yale School of Medicine.

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IW conceptualized the paper’s concepts, theory, and frameworks and wrote the complete draft. MS provided critical manuscript revision and idea development. MCF contributed to the final revision of the manuscript and the development of the CCPS methods and frameworks. AM devised the original form of CCPS that is the basis of the paper. He also co-wrote the introduction on healthcare simulation and CCPS, supported idea development, provided revisions to the paper, and prepared the manuscript for submission.

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Correspondence to Indigo Weller.

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Weller, I., Spiegel, M., de Carvalho Filho, M. et al. When Play Reveals the Ache: Introducing Co-constructive Patient Simulation for Narrative Practitioners in Medical Education. J Med Humanit (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10912-023-09837-7

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