Healing in the Absence of a Cure

This article offers a series of 3 vignettes exploring how art making has enabled me to understand my experience of the psychological and spiritual questions that have arisen throughout my diagnosis and subsequent treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) in the private hospital system in Australia. The f...

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Main Author: Libby Byrne DipVA, BEd, MAT, GradDipTheol, PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-03-01
Series:Journal of Patient Experience
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373518770828
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author Libby Byrne DipVA, BEd, MAT, GradDipTheol, PhD
author_facet Libby Byrne DipVA, BEd, MAT, GradDipTheol, PhD
author_sort Libby Byrne DipVA, BEd, MAT, GradDipTheol, PhD
collection DOAJ
description This article offers a series of 3 vignettes exploring how art making has enabled me to understand my experience of the psychological and spiritual questions that have arisen throughout my diagnosis and subsequent treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) in the private hospital system in Australia. The findings of the article indicate that the challenge to maintain a sense of identity that is separate to the experience of illness is critical for people who are living with MS and the language employed by health-care workers has a profound capacity to help or hinder this. Opportunities to make art in hospital supports the efficacy of prescribed medical treatments by enabling patients to exercise power in the midst of a process over which they have little or no control.
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spelling doaj.art-0edf7877dd364f4eb207f9f61b50cf6c2022-12-21T17:50:40ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Patient Experience2374-37432374-37352019-03-01610.1177/2374373518770828Healing in the Absence of a CureLibby Byrne DipVA, BEd, MAT, GradDipTheol, PhD0 Whitley College, University of Divinity, Melbourne, AustraliaThis article offers a series of 3 vignettes exploring how art making has enabled me to understand my experience of the psychological and spiritual questions that have arisen throughout my diagnosis and subsequent treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) in the private hospital system in Australia. The findings of the article indicate that the challenge to maintain a sense of identity that is separate to the experience of illness is critical for people who are living with MS and the language employed by health-care workers has a profound capacity to help or hinder this. Opportunities to make art in hospital supports the efficacy of prescribed medical treatments by enabling patients to exercise power in the midst of a process over which they have little or no control.https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373518770828
spellingShingle Libby Byrne DipVA, BEd, MAT, GradDipTheol, PhD
Healing in the Absence of a Cure
Journal of Patient Experience
title Healing in the Absence of a Cure
title_full Healing in the Absence of a Cure
title_fullStr Healing in the Absence of a Cure
title_full_unstemmed Healing in the Absence of a Cure
title_short Healing in the Absence of a Cure
title_sort healing in the absence of a cure
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373518770828
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