<p>In today's episode, host Augustine sits down with Kayla Branstetter — English instructor, TEDx speaker, doctoral candidate in healthcare education, and author of the forthcoming book <em>Don't Be an Athena</em> — for a conversation that sits right at the intersection of storytelling, reproductive trauma, and the future of patient-centered care.</p><p>Kayla's work in narrative medicine is a beautiful reminder that behind every chart, every lab result, and every clinical encounter is a human being with a story that deserves to be heard. And for midwives and birth workers who already know this in their bones — this episode gives you the language, the research, and the tools to do it even better.</p><p>In this episode we cover:</p><ul><li>What narrative medicine actually is — and why it's been around for centuries, we're just now naming it</li><li>Kayla's personal journey through her mother's teen pregnancy, her own infertility and miscarriage, and how storytelling found her</li><li>How a patient's chart tells a story — and what we miss when we only look at the numbers</li><li>The growing mistrust between the medical community and patients — and what narrative medicine offers as a bridge</li><li>How providers can support traumatized clients after unwished-for birth outcomes — including the power of offering writing as an alternative to talking</li><li>Obstetric violence, medical gaslighting, and what patients can actually do — from documenting their experience to filing grievances and amending their own medical records</li><li>How a midwife or doula can be a powerful patient advocate in the aftermath of trauma</li><li>Vicarious and secondary trauma in providers — and how narrative medicine workshops create space for clinicians to reflect and heal</li><li>The myth of Medusa and Athena — and why Kayla's book asks us to stop turning survivors into monsters</li><li>Why medical humanities is on the rise — and the medical school built next to an art museum that's changing how future doctors are trained</li></ul><p>Resources &amp; Links:</p><p>📖 Pre-order <em>Don't Be an Athena</em> by <a href="https://kaylabranstetter.wordpress.com/">Kayla Branstetter</a> — available July 20th on Amazon and in independent bookstores <br>🌐 Follow Kayla: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/kbranstetter87/">Instagram</a>, <a href="https://www.facebook.com/kaylabranstetter87/">Facebook</a>, and <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/kayla-branstetter">LinkedIn</a> — search Kayla Branstetter <br>🎤 <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x2VdZTr3ttY">Watch Kayla's TEDx Talk</a> on narrative medicine and reproductive trauma <br>🏡 Join our community: <a href="https://skool.com/midwiferywisdom%20">skool.com/midwiferywisdom </a></p>

Midwifery Wisdom Podcast

Midwifery Wisdom Collective

Narrative Medicine with Kayla Branstetter

MAY 13, 202642 MIN
Midwifery Wisdom Podcast

Narrative Medicine with Kayla Branstetter

MAY 13, 202642 MIN

Description

In today's episode, host Augustine sits down with Kayla Branstetter — English instructor, TEDx speaker, doctoral candidate in healthcare education, and author of the forthcoming book Don't Be an Athena — for a conversation that sits right at the intersection of storytelling, reproductive trauma, and the future of patient-centered care.Kayla's work in narrative medicine is a beautiful reminder that behind every chart, every lab result, and every clinical encounter is a human being with a story that deserves to be heard. And for midwives and birth workers who already know this in their bones — this episode gives you the language, the research, and the tools to do it even better.In this episode we cover:What narrative medicine actually is — and why it's been around for centuries, we're just now naming itKayla's personal journey through her mother's teen pregnancy, her own infertility and miscarriage, and how storytelling found herHow a patient's chart tells a story — and what we miss when we only look at the numbersThe growing mistrust between the medical community and patients — and what narrative medicine offers as a bridgeHow providers can support traumatized clients after unwished-for birth outcomes — including the power of offering writing as an alternative to talkingObstetric violence, medical gaslighting, and what patients can actually do — from documenting their experience to filing grievances and amending their own medical recordsHow a midwife or doula can be a powerful patient advocate in the aftermath of traumaVicarious and secondary trauma in providers — and how narrative medicine workshops create space for clinicians to reflect and healThe myth of Medusa and Athena — and why Kayla's book asks us to stop turning survivors into monstersWhy medical humanities is on the rise — and the medical school built next to an art museum that's changing how future doctors are trainedResources & Links:📖 Pre-order Don't Be an Athena by Kayla Branstetter — available July 20th on Amazon and in independent bookstores 🌐 Follow Kayla: Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn — search Kayla Branstetter 🎤 Watch Kayla's TEDx Talk on narrative medicine and reproductive trauma 🏡 Join our community: skool.com/midwiferywisdom