Narrative Medicine Skills Training

Narrative Medicine Skills Training

Hosted by the Center for Community and Global Health, and developed with support from the Mellon Foundation, community partner Northwest Narrative Medicine Collaborative (NWNMC) brings Narrative Medicine Skills Training to Lewis & Clark campus.

Northwest Narrative Medicine Collaborative (NWNMC) gathers health care professionals, patients, caregivers, students, academics, and artists in the shared practice of narrative medicine. 

Narrative Medicine Skills Training introduces the narrative medicine principles of attention, representation, and affiliation and develops participant skills of listening and witnessing. We will reflect on how listening and witnessing can be applied to stories of health, illness and healing in diverse healthcare settings to improve care and support healing.

Registration is OPEN for Narrative Medicine Skills Training, Saturday Feb. 21 2026! 


Who is Training for?

  • Students entering, studying, or considering the health professions
  • Healthcare professionals, faculty and staff curious about the practice of narrative medicine
  • Folks living with health conditions as patients or caregivers

In-person and interactive, this workshop encourages exploration, curiosity, and discussion in large and small groups, pairs, and mixed cohorts of students, healthcare professionals, and community members interested in the practice of narrative medicine. There will be opportunities to listen, read, write reflectively, and time to share writing if participants choose. Adequate breaks and restoration periods are included, as is lunch!

We are strengthened individually when we do this work in community–all are welcome.

Not sure if you see yourself on this list? Other questions? Reach out to Alexis Rehrmann 


When

Narrative Medicine Skills Training

Saturday, February 21, 2026 

8:45-3:30
 
Training will be held in-person, on campus at:
Lewis & Clark College
Portland, OR

Cost

$ 150.00 Health Care Community General Registration (Healthcare Professionals, Faculty, Staff)

$ 0.00 Student Registration (Costs are contributed by your home institution L&C, OHSU).  

A limited number of scholarships are available for those who are unable to afford the cost of registration. Please contact Alexis Rehrmann to request one.


Register for Narrative Medicine Skills Training

REGISTER HERE


Narrative Medicine Skills Training participants will learn to:

  • Define and practice the narrative medicine principles of attention, representation and affiliation
  • Strengthen their narrative medicine skills.
  • Reflect on how narrative medicine practice can build systems of trust 
  • Explore narrative medicine applications in diverse settings.

Equity & Inclusion Actions

  • Racial equity and justice lens is directly expressed
  • Patient narratives are centered
  • Positionality Reflections are included

 

 


Program Findings: Narrative Scribe Training Year 3

We carried out NWNMC’s third Narrative Scribe Training on February 11, 2023. This year, 60 participants registered for the training and 46 participated. L&C undergraduates were drawn from courses in Narrative Medicine, Public Health, Medical Anthropology, and Psychology. We also welcomed community members, health professionals, faculty and students from partner institutions in the Pacific Northwest (NW5C). Post-training feedback was completed by 24 participants and showed strong evidence of having achieved the learning objectives.

  • “I left inspired 

    ...hopeful and full of intention. I left feeling more connected to myself and my community and a broader sense of community in the world as well.

    –NST Yr 3 Participant Feedback from post-training survey

  • “I was surprised 

    ...by the range of people involved - many outside of healthcare. I also strongly appreciated the diversity of backgrounds represented.”

    –Narrative Scribe Training Participant, February 2022

  • “Expanded my outlook 

    ... on the future of health, and for the first time, there is a sense of excitement at the possibilities.”

    –Narrative Scribe Training Participant, February 2022

  • “It inspired me 

    ...to continue with the sciences with more trust that what I learn will actually have application to the things I care about eventually. It gave me hope.”

    –Participant, 2021 Narrative Scribe Training

  • “The feeling of solidarity 

    …and community in the (Zoom) room, the reminder that positionally affects every encounter and exchange with another, the knowledge that listening is active, not passive, excitement that narrative medicine is so interdisciplinary, and the feeling of reading someone’s words back to them. There are so many things that I will take from Narrative Scribe Training.”

    –Narrative Scribe Training Participant, February 2022


ccgh community partner, narrative scribe training
Jolina Ruckert, who teaches Psychology of Gender, talks with Story Gorge workshop leaders Kyle Glenn (left) and Sean O'Connor.

Psychology Meets Digital Storytelling

Students in an upper-division psychology course are partnering with local video production company Story Gorge to use the art of digital storytelling to explore the experience of gender.

narrative scribe training, wellness
Two people sit together and look at a notebook.

Three Minutes to Clarity and Connection

At a recent campus event, community members learned how to practice the 3-Minute Mental Makeover, a quick writing exercise designed to reduce stress and improve communication and connection with others.

narrative scribe training
Image of a sea shell and the word Listen.

Listen to This: A Poem

You don’t have to be ready,
 but you can be loved…

A poem spoken into collective being by Narrative Scribes at Lewis & Clark College, February 11, 2023 and scribed by Alexis Rehrmann.

narrative scribe training, nwnmc

Learning to Listen to Patient’s Stories

Narrative medicine programs teach doctors and other caregivers “sensitive interviewing skills” and the art of “radical listening” to improve patient care. The New York Times reports in this story that narrative medicine is now taught in some form at roughly 80 percent of medical schools in the United States.
narrative scribe training
   Dr. Pamela Schaff discusses narrative medicine at USC's Keck School of Medicine as Chioma Moneme, a student in the class of 2020, look...

How Doctors Use stories to Cope with COVID

Narrative Medicine is a discipline in which doctors and nurses use the principles of literature and art to better understand patients’ stories and incorporate them into their practices, by asking many questions and carefully listening to their patient’s answers. 

In Los Angeles, Narrative Medicine is now being taught at USC Keck School of Medicine and at the new Kaiser Permanente medical school.

Read the LA Times coverage
collaboration, interdisciplinary, narrative scribe training
Stacks of journals for Narrative Scribe Training participants.

Bringing Empathy to Health Care Through Narrative Scribe Training

L&C’s Center for Community and Global Health offers Narrative Scribe Training, which emphasizes the importance of listening and storytelling to health care teams.
narrative scribe training
Graphic drawing of people sitting in a circle, one at the center dressed as a doctor, connected by a web of light.

Narrative Medicine: The Lost Art Of Active Listening

Narrative medicine is the practice of listening, absorbing, metabolizing and being moved to action by stories of wellness and disease. When put into practice, this involves treating a patient as a whole person, rather than just as their illness.

Read the full story by Aidan D’Anna on the LC Pioneer Log.

community engagement, inside-out, narrative scribe training, WAP

VIDEO: How the Humanities Can Save Humanity

Panel Discussion Presented by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation

In celebration of National Arts and Humanities Month (#NAHM), Elizabeth Alexander, president of the Mellon Foundation, moderated a wide-ranging discussion with artists Mel Chin and Allison Janae Hamilton and writer-photographer Emily Raboteau about how the humanities are tackling the interconnected challenges of climate change, public health, and racial injustice, among other pressing social justice issues.

The Lewis & Clark College Center for Community and Global Health is supported in part by a Mellon Foundation grant, Healing Social Suffering Through Narrative. 

community engagement, narrative scribe training, nwnmc
Northwest Narrative Medicine Collaborative logo

Connect with the Northwest Narrative Medicine Collaborative

The Northwest Narrative Medicine Collaborative welcomes patients, health care professionals, clinicians, caregivers, writers, artists, and scholars in the practice of Narrative Medicine.