Leading narrative medicine expert John Launer argues healthcare professionals must collaborate rather than dictate during patient conversations.
A prominent NHS physician is challenging doctors across the country to abandon their tight control over patient consultations. John Launer, a family physician and narrative medicine specialist, argues that some medical professionals remain “impervious to the idea that they should let go of rigidly controlling every conversation” with patients.
The call comes as healthcare moves towards more collaborative approaches that prioritise patient experiences alongside clinical protocols.
The Case Against Control
Launer, who serves as a columnist for the British Medical Journal and holds an honorary associate professorship at University College London, specialises in narrative-based medicine. This approach treats healthcare consultations as collaborative processes where patients and doctors work together to understand illness experiences.
Traditional consultations often follow rigid diagnostic frameworks where doctors direct conversations according to clinical protocols. But narrative-based medicine flips this dynamic. Instead of imposing medical structures from the outset, healthcare professionals listen to how patients describe their experiences of illness.
The approach doesn’t abandon medical evidence or clinical guidelines. Rather, it integrates what patients actually experience with established medical knowledge.
Beyond the Consultation Room
Narrative medicine offers practical benefits for both sides of the consultation desk. Medical literature shows the approach provides healthcare professionals with deeper wisdom about patient experiences during illness. But it goes further than understanding – it has the capacity to create new narratives that can heal and transform both patients and doctors.
John Launer, honorary associate professor at UCL, said the collaborative process becomes “mutually beneficial” when healthcare professionals step back from rigid control.
The shift requires doctors to balance listening with clinical expertise. Effective consultations must remain practical and evidence-based while incorporating patient narratives into the diagnostic and treatment process.
Changing Medical Education
Medical educators increasingly view narrative medicine as representing best practice in patient care. The approach demands that doctors develop listening skills alongside diagnostic abilities. Some practitioners, however, may resist moving away from structured consultation models they view as necessary for efficiency and diagnostic accuracy.
Patient satisfaction often improves when their experiences and concerns help shape consultations rather than being subordinated to purely clinical agendas.
Source: @bmj_latest
Key Takeaways
- Narrative-based medicine encourages collaborative consultations where patients and doctors work together
- The approach integrates patient experiences with medical evidence rather than replacing clinical knowledge
- Medical educators increasingly view narrative techniques as best practice for patient care
What This Means for Kent Residents
GP practices across Kent could benefit from adopting these collaborative consultation techniques, potentially improving patient experiences throughout the county’s NHS services. If you’re visiting your GP, consider preparing to share your illness experience in your own words rather than simply answering clinical questions. NHS Kent and Medway ICB may want to explore training opportunities for primary care staff in narrative-based consultation methods to enhance patient outcomes across the region.
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