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CHEST Guidelines
American-Sentencing_chest
American-Sentencing_chest
Pdf Summary
The poem "American Sentencing" by Jen Karetnick captures the frustration patients often feel when physicians focus solely on test results and data rather than using a more holistic, intuitive approach to diagnosing ailments. The author evokes imagery of the medical process, highlighting feelings of being reduced to mere results—negative and unimpressive—suggesting the patient feels like an enigma unsolved by rigid scientific tests. The poem underscores a tension between empirical data and the art of medicine, emphasizing intuition and experience as integral, yet often overlooked, components in patient care.<br /><br />Jen Karetnick is an established author of 14 books residing in Miami, where she lives with her neurologist husband and family. Her writing reflects a poignant exploration of the diagnostic process and its impact on the patient experience, drawing attention to the gap between clinical data and patient narratives.<br /><br />The Editor’s Note from Michael Zack at the journal "CHEST" introduces the guidelines for poetry submissions to the Pectoriloquy section, which emphasizes that poems should relate to the concerns of physicians and medicine, be original, and not exceed 350 words. Additionally, the note provides submission details for aspiring contributors. The work is published by the American College of Chest Physicians and notes that Jen Karetnick's poem is protected under copyright, highlighting its intended audience of medical professionals and its thematic exploration of medical practice challenges.
Keywords
American Sentencing
Jen Karetnick
patient frustration
holistic diagnosis
medical imagery
intuition in medicine
clinical data
patient narratives
poetry submission
CHEST journal
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