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Resource type: Web Article Language: en: English Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1001/journalofethics.2018.20.2.fred1-1802 BibTeX citation key: Venkatesan2018a Email resource to friend View all bibliographic details |
Categories: General Keywords: "Janet & Me", "Mom’s Cancer", Autobiography, Fies. Brian, Illness, Mack. Stan, Medicine, USA Creators: Saji, Venkatesan Collection: AMA Journal of Ethics |
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Attachments | URLs https://journalofe ... statistics/2018-09 |
Abstract |
Increasing reliance on statistics for treatment and clinical risk assessment not only leads to the reductive interpretation of disease but also obscures ambiguities, distrust, and profound emotions that are important parts of a patient’s lived experience of illness and that should be regarded as clinically and ethically relevant. Enabling critique of the limitations of statistics and illustrating their hegemonic impact on the patient’s experience of illness, graphic medicine emerges as a democratic platform where marginalized perspectives on illness experiences are vindicated. Through a close reading of two carer narratives, Mom’s Cancer (2006) and Janet & Me: An Illustrated Story of Love and Loss (2004), we illustrate how graphic pathographies represent experiential features of illness that are obscured by overreliance on statistical data.
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