In Medicine Needs Poetry, poet and educator Janna Lopez invites readers into a more human way of practicing―and receiving―care. In a world of efficiency, productivity metrics, charting demands, and relentless pace, something vital has been pushed to the margins: the inner life. And without it, even the most advanced medicine risks losing its deepest purpose.
Drawing from medical humanities, lived experience, and the transformational power of language, Lopez demonstrates how poetry becomes a lifeline―offering a pathway back to what matters most in healing: empathy, clarity, grief-processing, resilience, and connection. This book is not an argument for creativity as a luxury. It is a bold and compassionate invitation to recognize poetry as an essential tool for human survival inside both medical and mainstream cultures: a way for clinicians and caregivers to name what they witness, metabolize what they absorb, and remain present without becoming hardened, numb, or burned out. Through reflection, story, and poetic invitation, the book illuminates how language can hold what medicine often cannot―moral injury, cumulative grief, exhaustion, uncertainty, awe, and the aching tenderness of caring for another life.
Medicine Needs Poetry insists that healing is not only clinical. It is emotional, spiritual, relational. It is the feeling of being seen. It is the restoration of dignity. It is the return to meaning.
In Medicine Needs Poetry, poet and educator Janna Lopez invites readers into a more human way of practicing―and receiving―care. In a world of efficiency, productivity metrics, charting demands, and relentless pace, something vital has been pushed to the margins: the inner life. And without it, even the most advanced medicine risks losing its deepest purpose.
Drawing from medical humanities, lived experience, and the transformational power of language, Lopez demonstrates how poetry becomes a lifeline―offering a pathway back to what matters most in healing: empathy, clarity, grief-processing, resilience, and connection. This book is not an argument for creativity as a luxury. It is a bold and compassionate invitation to recognize poetry as an essential tool for human survival inside both medical and mainstream cultures: a way for clinicians and caregivers to name what they witness, metabolize what they absorb, and remain present without becoming hardened, numb, or burned out. Through reflection, story, and poetic invitation, the book illuminates how language can hold what medicine often cannot―moral injury, cumulative grief, exhaustion, uncertainty, awe, and the aching tenderness of caring for another life.
Medicine Needs Poetry insists that healing is not only clinical. It is emotional, spiritual, relational. It is the feeling of being seen. It is the restoration of dignity. It is the return to meaning.