Telling Life Stories May Help Improve Care for Cancer Patients

West Virginia University Medicine is taking a closer look at a little-known approach to cancer treatment called narrative medicine with the aim of…

West Virginia University Medicine is taking a closer look at a little-known approach to cancer treatment called narrative medicine with the aim of improving the treatment experience for doctors and patients alike.

The idea with narrative medicine is that if doctors get to know patients through their life stories, the physicians will be able to improve their ability to care for their patients, beyond simply managing symptoms.

The approach is still relatively new, and not very common – it takes time to sit down with a patient and record his or her story – but last year, WVU Medicine launched a clinical study of narrative medicine with cancer patients in the hopes of both improving treatment and facilitating the patients’ abilities to cope with illness. 

Lacie’s Story

Lacie Lee Wallace was one of the first participants. Wallace’s arms and chest are covered in colorful tattoos that stand in stark contrast to pale, almost translucent skin. Her body sustains the shocked look of someone who rapidly lost a lot of weight and isn’t quite sure what happened yet.

She’s 33, a mom of two and is being treated for stage 4 colon cancer.  

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Lacie Wallace receives treatment for stage four colon cancer.

None of the drugs doctors have tried have worked longer than a couple weeks before the cancer mutated and the drugs stop working.

“More doctors, more appointments, more drugs,” she said with a sigh. “Scary stuff.”

Wallace is multimedia artist who works mostly with paper, creating collages, or “art you have to interact with,” as she described it.

“We want to be feeling like we’re important. We want someone to want to hear our story, we have that need as humans to like you know convey stuff to other people. We want to communicate on a higher level,” she said.

“And I think the arts let you take it a step beyond just words. You get to go into something, you get to see something and be a part of it. I tend to make a lot of interactive art where the person can’t see the art in less they interact with the piece. And I like that because always before it’s like ‘don’t touch my art!’ But I like to make them have to touch the art or they don’t get to see it. Like then they don’t get to be a part of it if they don’t want to participate. And it’s fine if they don’t want to participate, but it’s here if you want to.

“And I think art is therapy in that way. And I think it’s the same with the storytelling. You know it builds us up. And even if it’s just for one day, or one minute or one hour you feel empowered because someone’s listening and actually cares about your story.”

Narrative Medicine Program

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Renee Nicholson

So for her, the narrative medicine program being conducted by doctor Carl Grey and multi and interdisciplinary studies professor Renee Nicholson was a natural fit.

“My main idea was that I do something called advanced care planning,” said Dr. Grey, a geriatrician and hospice doctor who focuses mostly on easing patients symptoms toward the end of life, practicing what’s called “palliative care.”

“And if you read about advanced care planning it’s talking to patients about what they would want if something happens to them and they’re not able to make decisions for themselves – especially when they’re very sick,” he said.

But patients don’t always fill out “advanced care” forms, even though they can make the difference between dying in a hospital or dying at home or having CPR performed, or not. Grey thinks part of the problem is that advanced care planning forms, called advanced directives, don’t include space for narratives.

“So you can look at this advanced directive and see that they have this wish or that wish, but they usually just mean whether they want CPR, but you don’t have any idea of what the context of the story was. So again, I thought getting a story might be helpful with that,” he said.

There’s also some evidence, he said, that doing writing with patients can help with quality of life.

“And as someone who works in palliative care, I care a lot about quality of life. It’s always something I’m trying to improve with patients.”

Clinical Trial

So when Grey met Nicholson, the two of them decided to work together to write grant proposals for a clinical trial of narrative medicine. The project was funded and Nicholson began collecting patient stories last August.

Credit Kara Lofton / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Lacie Wallace with one of her favorite pieces of her own work in her backyard in Moundsville.

“Our goal is to have them talk about whatever they want,” she said.

The stories are taken orally and then transcribed and lightly edited into prose. A final version becomes part of the patient’s medical file.

“It’s really what they think is important about their life and what they want to talk about,” Nicholson said.

Wallace loves that.

“Now some people choose to discuss their cancer and when they diagnosed and how it changed their life,” she said. “And I decided that instead of talking just about my cancer, which is more of a side note to my life, not the main chapter, I just started talking off about memories that make me happy. And one of the best memories that make me happy and things that inspire me is to be a model for other artists.”

Wallace said when she sits as a model for other artists she makes sure to dress up in colorful clothes or dramatic makeup to give them something interesting to work with. It’s humbling, she said, to see yourself in the eyes of another.

Narrative Effects

Nicholson said reflecting on life is the whole point. When you do that, you come to learn what’s important to you, and deciding what you want at the end of your life might be a little easier. She said it can also help you connect with loved ones or distract you from the painful monotony that is cancer treatment.

Credit Kara Lofton / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Lacie works on her self-portrait for an upcoming art show.

“What we try to do is see if there’s any correlation between the patient’s quality of life and we use a survey that’s well-known and well-used called the McGill Quality of Life Survey, and we measure both when we go in to take the story and when we return the stories to see if there’s any change in quality of life and then we ask some questions about the patient’s preparedness to do advanced care planning and their understanding of it and whether they would be comfortable talking to their doctor or their health professional,” Nicholson said.

“And then we also ask them after they received their story and whether doing the story was a pleasurable experience for them and helped them feel prepared to have some of those conversations.”

The project is still pretty new, so there isn’t a lot of definitive data yet, but Nicholson said anecdotally it’s showing a lot of promise. I asked her if she thought it was sustainable – gathering stories takes a lot of time and as anyone who has spent extended time in the hospital knows – doctors don’t have a lot of time to spend with patients. She said she’s honestly not sure, but hopes so. Stories are an important part of care.

“I think for the doctors it gives them a different view of the patients,” Nicholson said. “One of the things that Dr. Grey shared with me very early on was I just didn’t know the stories were going to be so beautiful. And that really struck me because I was expect people’s personal stories to be beautiful – I think people lead much more compelling lives than they think. So that was interesting and very compelling in terms of medicine because you get a certain story in medicine, but you don’t always get a total one. Patients themselves get excited and I think there’s something validating about seeing your story on a piece of paper.”

But on some level, Nicholson said, the story gathering is just about having something different and unique going on in a situation that is pretty tough. The stories, she said, allow participants to escape into the self they were before their diagnosis.

Nicholson and Grey hope to complete their study in July 2018. Nicholson said if her approach to narrative medicine improves health outcomes for cancer patients, she’d like to expand the project to other groups of patients struggling with long hospital stays. But that, she said, is a little way off.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation, Charleston Area Medical Center and WVU Medicine.

Mammography Bus Making Stops in Berkeley, Morgan Counties

West Virginia University says a mobile mammography center will visit Berkeley and Morgan counties this month.

The vehicle, known as Bonnie’s Bus, offers digital mammograms and breast care education for women. It’s provided by WVU Medicine and the WVU Cancer Institute.

The bus will be at Berkeley Senior Services in Martinsburg from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 12. Call (304) 263-8873 for an appointment.

The bus will be at CNB Bank in Berkeley Springs from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 13. Call (304) 596-5114 for an appointment.

A physician’s order is needed for a mammogram.

No woman over 40 will be turned away because of lack of funding. Women without insurance are covered by the West Virginia Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening Program or the West Virginia affiliate of Susan G. Komen for the Cure.

Despite W.Va. Economic Woes, WVU Medicine is Booming

In a state with above-average unemployment, the state's premier hospital system is booming.WVU Medicine hired 2,228 staff last year, has openings for 699…

In a state with above-average unemployment, the state’s premier hospital system is booming.

WVU Medicine hired 2,228 staff last year, has openings for 699 more and expects further expansion in its high-level specialties.

That follows this week’s opening of a new 10-story tower housing its Heart & Vascular Institute.

As the West Virginia economy slumped, this corner of the state’s health care industry has been thriving, thanks in part to the Affordable Care Act.

The law, which Republicans in Washington have said they intend to repeal, added $12 million to the hospital’s bottom line in 2015, according to WVU Medicine Chief Executive Albert Wright. About 70 to 75 percent of its patients are on government-funded Medicaid or Medicare.

West Virginia is among the nation’s poorest states, with median household income of $41,000, unemployment at 6 percent, and 18 percent of its 1.8 million people under the poverty line, according to federal data. It also has one of the highest cancer rates. And a 2015 report said it had the nation’s second-highest rate of adult obesity, a condition linked to multiple health problems.

West Virginia University Health System is now now the state’s largest employer, with nearly 14,000 people on staff. It received 63,435 job applications last year, but its needs are particular. It’s been offering $10,000 hiring bonuses for registered nurses and recruiting from the state’s two nursing schools as well as looking out-of-state.

Demand for its hospitals services is at an all-time high. It’s anchored by Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown, which has been running at 98 percent capacity, with patients on waiting lists for its 531 beds.

The tower’s five new patient floors filled up as soon as they were opened this week.

“There’s almost an insatiable appetite for everything we do,” Wright said. “We open a bed, the bed fills. We open a clinic, the clinic fills. And the physician’s working at 75 percent productivity in no time.”

Doctors and nurses in an intensive care nursery provide care for newborns including addictions treatment. Other specialties planned for expansions are women and children’s health, cancer, neurology and critical care. The hospital gets many patients from the rural state’s smaller hospitals, including the seven in its network, facilities that cannot spend the millions of dollars for the expensive technology used for certain advanced care, he said.

“We have been recruiting intentionally very sub-specialized physicians,” he said. “You call WVU and they have somebody who does that.”

Most patients come from West Virginia, with increases from all 55 counties as well as some from Maryland, Pennsylvania and Ohio, Wright said. “What I’ve found, and I’ve only been here two-and-a-half years, is if WVU does something and does it well, people from West Virginia would prefer to come here.”

The hospital was recently ranked sixth among 102 academic medical centers across the U.S. for delivering high-quality care. Among other measures, its rate of hospital-acquired infections, a problem at many large teaching hospitals that often have sicker patients, is low.

The health care industry has high turnover, especially among new nurses, which explains some of last year’s hires. However, WVU Medicine added 818 net new positions in Morgantown — roughly half licensed medical professionals — while expanding toward 645 private rooms through tower construction and renovating older space.

As the academic hospital affiliated with West Virginia’s land grant university, its job is to take care of anyone who walks through the door, Wright said. If the law known as “Obamacare” were repealed and not replaced, the system “would take a hit,” Wright said, providing more free care with no reimbursement. WVU Medicine, “a large financially viable organization,” would survive but many smaller hospitals wouldn’t be able to take the hit, he said.

But patients would still get the care they need because of the hospital’s commitment to its mission.

“We do not say no to care,” Wright said. “If we say no, there’s nobody else to take care of them.”

WVU Medicine Clinic Being Built in Marion County

Construction is under way on WVU Medicine’s latest project — a new clinic being built in Marion County.

The Dominion-Post reports the $13.9 million, 25,000-square-foot outpatient center will be owned and operated by University Health Associates. WVA Medicine says the center will include 39 exam rooms and three procedure rooms.

Several services will be housed there, including primary care, urgent care, orthopedics and general and vascular surgeries.

Dr. Judie Charlton, WVU Medicine’s chief medical officer, says a community needs assessment showed that Marion County had too few health providers to cover certain patient needs.

The building is scheduled to open in September.

WVU Medicine Tops List of State's Largest Employers

West Virginia labor officials say the state’s 100 largest private employers are led by WVU Medicine, this year replacing Wal-Mart, which slipped to second place.

Based on March 2016 data, WorkForce West Virginia says the former West Virginia United Health System was No. 2 last year.

Wal-Mart held the top spot from 1998 through 2015.

The others in the top 10, in descending order are Charleston Area Medical Center, Kroger, Mylan Pharmaceuticals, Lowe’s Home Centers, St. Mary’s Medical Center, Cabell Huntington Hospital, Wheeling Hospital and Res-Care Inc.

According to WorkForce West Virginia, those 10 had 4,395 more employees than the top 10 employers last year.

Rural Kidney Clinics Expand Care for Thousands of W.Va. Residents

West Virginia University Medicine rural kidney clinics have provided services to more than 50,000 people since 2003. The rural outreach program offers…

West Virginia University Medicine rural kidney clinics have provided services to more than 50,000 people since 2003.

The rural outreach program offers prevention services and treatment for kidney disease at 11 outreach clinics around the state and one in western Maryland.

Kidney specialist Rebecca Schmidt estimates that access to rural clinics saves patients more than 6.5 million miles in travel and close to a million miles in gas.

Many of those patients simply would not have sought care until their kidney disease was acute and possibly in need of emergency actions, said kidney disease specialist Beth Pellegrino, M.D., in a press release.

More than 10 percent of Americans have kidney disease, according to the Centers for Disease Control, but many may not know it because kidney disease has no early symptoms. Kidney disease is the sixth leading cause of death in West Virginia.

Diabetes, high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease and high cholesterol are all risk factors for kidney disease. Residents who have those risk factors are encouraged to get regularly tested for the disease.

The percentage of patients in West Virginia who started dialysis in an outpatient setting rose from 74 percent in 2004 to 89 percent in 2011, making the state comparable to the national average.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

Exit mobile version