You are seeing this message because your Web browser does not support basic Web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.


ABOUT JAMA
Advanced Search

Welcome   | My Account | E-mail Alerts | Access Rights | Sign In


  Vol. 296 No. 1, July 5, 2006 TABLE OF CONTENTS
  JAMA
  •  Online Features
  Book and Media Reviews
 This Article
 •Full text
 •PDF
 •Send to a friend
 • Save in My Folder
 •Save to citation manager
 •Permissions
 Citing Articles
 •Contact me when this article is cited
 Related Content
 •Similar articles in JAMA
 Topic Collections
 •Humanities
 •Humanities, Other
 •Nursing Care
 •Alert me on articles by topic

Nursing, Poetry
The Poetry of Nursing: Poems and Commentaries of Leading Nurse-Poets

edited by Judy Schaefer (Literature and Medicine Series, No. 7), 208 pp, paper, $29, ISBN 0-87338-848-8, Kent, Ohio, Kent State University Press, 2006.

JAMA. 2006;296:103-104.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text and any section headings.

In this anthology, 15 gifted nurse-poets show their talent for poetry and prose, their love of the nursing profession, and the magic of the written word. The poems are born of nurses' skillful probing of seemingly ordinary experiences—changing a dressing, admitting a patient, or simply assessing behavior or the body's hums.

From their observations and insights, the writers give structure and meaning to experiences that defy explanation. They help nurses and physicians to relearn what many forget: that patients are our greatest teachers, that there are always lessons to be learned, and that our work matters.

In Cortney Davis's Heroics, we are reminded of our youthful earnestness in longing for the sheer adrenalin rush of something—anything—to happen on those long, late-night shifts. Theodore Deppe's poem Admission, Children's Unit confronts the horror of child abuse:

The details didn’t, of course, come out at first,
but I sensed them. The boy's refusal . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Linda Honan Pellico, PhD, APRN, Reviewer
Yale School of Nursing
New Haven, Conn
linda.pellico@yale.edu







HOME | CURRENT ISSUE | PAST ISSUES | TOPIC COLLECTIONS | CME | SUBMIT | SUBSCRIBE | HELP
CONDITIONS OF USE | PRIVACY POLICY | CONTACT US | SITE MAP
 
© 2006 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.