Healing Skills for Medical Practice
Nov 19th, 2008 by admin
From the November Annals of Internal Medicine. While not explicitly Buddhist, the 8 skills identified as “healing skills” are conspicuously compatible with (if not fully supported by) a Buddhist understanding of ethics and being in the world.
“It is well recognized that physicians’ relationships with their patients can have healing effects, but the skills in this area of medical practice are understudied. This article reports onresearch designed to identify a core set of healing skills. The authors interviewed 50 practitioners, who were identified by their peers as “healers,” representing both allopathic andcomplementary medicine and alternative medicine. Interviews were tape-recorded, transcribed, made anonymous, and analyzed independently, and differences were reconciled by discussion. Eight skills emerged as pivotal from the transcripts of these interviews: do the little things; take time; be open and listen; find something to like, to love; remove barriers; let the patient explain; share authority; and be committed. Mastery of these skills would provide enduring improvements in patient care and reaffirm medicine’s calling as a healing profession.”
Larry R. Churchill, PhD, and David Schenck, PhD
18 November 2008 | Volume 149 Issue 10 | Pages 720-72