From one of America's most celebrated psychiatrists, the book that has
taught generations of healers why healing the sick is about more than
just diagnosing their illness.
Modern medicine treats sick patients like broken machines -- figure out
what is physically wrong, fix it, and send the patient on their way. But
humans are not machines. When we are ill, we experience our illness: we
become scared, distressed, tired, weary. Our illnesses are not just
biological conditions, but human ones.
It was Arthur Kleinman, a Harvard psychiatrist and anthropologist, who
saw this truth when most of his fellow doctors did not. Based on decades
of clinical experience studying and treating chronic illness, The
Illness Narratives makes a case for interpreting the illness experience
of patients as a core feature of doctoring.
Before Being Mortal, there was The Illness Narratives. It remains
today a prescient and passionate case for bridging the gap between
patient and practitioner.