Sunday, October 31, 2010

An International Healing Parable

The world was transfixed by the rescue of the 33 Chilean miners.  CNN covered the story and many of us stayed up to see to the end.  This last week, NOVA, told an hour long story that was more than just the final extraction of the miners.   It was a story of faith, hope, prayer, perserverance of not just the miners and their families, but also of those who drilled.   In a commentary/interview on the PBS Newshour, one of those drillers, Greg Hall, was asked about the impact on his faith.  He closes with a quote from another driller colleague who said, "Greg, you know something? That job was impossible. You could not drill that. God drilled that hole."

Emergency Mine Rescue
PBS Newshour Interview

Saturday, October 2, 2010

"Healer" by Carol Cassella

Sometimes the context of reading a book complements what you read and begin to understand.

I just finished reading Carol Cassella second novel while working in Spokane, Washington. Besides good writing, she is a very thoughtful physician who works in Seattle, Washington. Her concerns in this novel are many of the same concerns that I have tried to address in "Healing Agents: Chrisitian Perspectives".

Since arriving in Spokane, I have been in the process of learning about the health, cultures and the geography of eastern Washington. It is a fascinating place and if you read the novel you will learn about this wonderful place. One shared concern is how healthcare is delivered in rural areas and the critical role nurses, physicians and small hospitals respond in these isolated environments.

The protagonist is forced to rediscover her calling and learns from some wonderful mentors. Her husband is forced to understand the limits of the scientific paradigm and the business model. What is amazing is that somehow their marriage survives their realities.

This book is a good representation of the reality that medicine is facing.

Marvin

Friday, August 20, 2010

A Nursing Response

"You are first to be congratulated for tackling such an important issue and in such a creative, sincere way. I loved how you wove the writings of philosophy, religion and medicine into a compelling argument for adopting a broader approach to patient care and healing. I found the book a very easy and enjoyable read, and the addition of discussion questions will make it accessible and useful for all kinds of groups. I hope you will be very pleased with the response you receive from those who use it. Your book is a wonderful means to beginning a conversation that stopped many years ago and needs to be reignited!"

Elizabeth K. Woodard, RN, PhD

Monday, August 16, 2010

Grieving/Healing

It is difficult to address the reality of healing when there is the death of a child. Here is a recent Christian response to that reality.

The title of the sermon by Rev. John Hage is "The God that Weeps" delivered on 7/11/2010 at Mount Pleasant Presbyterian Church, Mount Pleasant, South Carolina.
Used with permission of Rev. John Hage.

http://www.mppc.net/410623.ihtml

Friday, August 6, 2010

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Other Voices

It is probably just a coincident that today(July 29, 2010) the conversations about healing have had increased visibility. Two of my favorite authors converged on the national stage. Abraham Verghese was part of a segment on the McNeil Newshour, titled "Hands-on Healing" and Atul Gawande was having conversations on his essay in the New Yorker, "Letting Go: What should medicine do when it can't save your life?"(August 2, 2010).

These authors continue to be strong voices of reflection and healing. Keep listening!

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/health/july-dec10/healing_07-29.html
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/08/02/100802fa_fact_gawande

Marvin

Monday, July 26, 2010

Review-Description

"Healing Agents is a remarkable, brief book of testimonies, comment and elements on the subject of healing. It invites one to reflect, ponder, engage in conversation toward integration of our science and the transcendence of our healing ministries to those suffering the afflictions of our broken world. Our concerns focus on the relationship between "high tech vs. high touch," and as Abraham Verghese M.D. warns of our patients becoming icons. This book returns our thinking to the realities of calling and healing in the Christian tradition, and is timely as our nation wrestles with healthcare and the education of providers. Suffering is part of a broken world; healing is according to the will of God."

William E. Van Eerden M.D.
Holland, Michigan