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Open Book Project

A Narrative Medicine Program for Social Justice and Inclusion

We all have stories. Stories about our lives, our families, our illness, our profession. In medicine, stories offer a way to understand patients by offering a window into "the person that the disease has."

The Open Book Project is a three-semester elective at the Heritage College for first- and second-year students. Students who choose to participate in the Open Book Project elective will join a small group of fellow students and two facilitators weekly to examine a piece of narrative work (think: paintings, lyrics, poems, short stories, etc.) and engage in the practices of narrative medicine including close reading, radical listening and reflective writing. The sessions run 60-90 minutes in length and will require little preparation. Just come ready to be an active participant and 鈥渞espectful and humble witness.鈥

Open Book Project Goals

  1. Learn what narrative medicine is and how to think narratively.
  2. Develop and practice skills of narrative medicine including close reading, radical listening, reflective writing.
  3. Explore different ideologies and worldviews using a narrative approach.
  4. Apply a narrative lens/framework to complex issues of social justice, inequities and disparities.
  5. Reflect on applying narrative approaches to interpersonal and clinical relationships.
Graphic for the Open Book Project, featuring an outline of an open book


For more information about enrolling in the Open Book Project elective series as a first-year student, please email the instructor of record, Sharon Casapulla, Ed.D., MPH, at casapull@ohio.edu

Read More

  • Open Book Project Focuses on Narrative Medicine


    One facilitator and two students involved in the Open Book Project submitted reflections on their experiences with the program.

  • Published Articles by the Open Book Project Team


  • Collaboration with Kennedy Museum of Art


    In January 2020, the Kennedy Museum of Art added a studio component to their collaborative programming with medical students and faculty as part of the Open Book Project.