Document Detail


The touch that heals: the uses and meanings of touch in the clinical encounter.
MedLine Citation:
PMID:  18399760     Owner:  NLM     Status:  MEDLINE    
Abstract/OtherAbstract:
This paper investigates the healer's touch in contemporary medical practice, with attention to both allopathic and alternative modalities. Healing is understood as the recovery of an integrated relationship between the self and its body, others, and the surrounding world-the relationship that illness has rendered problematic. In this context, touch can play a crucial role in the clinical encounter. Unlike other modes of sensory apprehension, which tend to involve distance and/or objectification, touch unfolds through an impactful, expressive, reciprocity between the toucher and the touched. For the ill person this can serve to reestablish human connection and facilitate healing changes at the prelinguistic level. The healer's touch involves a blending of attention, compassion, and skill. The clinical efficacy of touch is also dependent upon the patient's active receptivity, aspects of which are explored. All too often, modern medical practice is characterized predominately by the "objectifying touch" of the physical examination, or the "absent touch" wherein technological mediation replaces embodied contact. This paper explores the unique properties of touch as a medium of perception, action, and expression that can render touch a healing force within the clinical encounter.
Authors:
Drew Leder; Mitchell W Krucoff
Publication Detail:
Type:  Journal Article; Review    
Journal Detail:
Title:  Journal of alternative and complementary medicine (New York, N.Y.)     Volume:  14     ISSN:  1075-5535     ISO Abbreviation:  J Altern Complement Med     Publication Date:  2008 Apr 
Date Detail:
Created Date:  2008-04-10     Completed Date:  2008-07-11     Revised Date:  -    
Medline Journal Info:
Nlm Unique ID:  9508124     Medline TA:  J Altern Complement Med     Country:  United States    
Other Details:
Languages:  eng     Pagination:  321-7     Citation Subset:  IM    
Affiliation:
Department of Philosophy, Loyola College in Maryland, Baltimore, MD 21210, USA. dleder@loyola.edu
Export Citation:
APA/MLA Format     Download EndNote     Download BibTex
MeSH Terms
Descriptor/Qualifier:
Attitude of Health Personnel*
Clinical Competence
Empathy*
Humans
Mental Healing*
Mind-Body Relations (Metaphysics)*
Professional-Patient Relations*
Research Design
Self Concept
Stress, Psychological / prevention & control
Therapeutic Touch*

From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine


Previous Document:  Effect of auricular pellet acupressure on antioxidative systems in high-risk diabetes mellitus.
Next Document:  A new geometrical description of entanglement and the curative homeopathic process.