A
Sam is a fourth-year student at Harvard Medical School, but poetry is still a big part of his life, now with a new teacher, Rafael Campo, who believes poetry can benefit every doctor's education and work. Rafael is a physician, professor and a highly respected poet.
“Poetry is in every encounter with my patients. I think healing is really in a very great way about poetry. And if we do anything when we re with our patients, we’re really immersing ourselves in their stories, really hearing their voices. And, certainly, that's what a poem does,” he said.
Rafael worries that something important has been lost in medicine and medical education today: humanity, which he finds in poetry. To end that, he leads a weekly reading and writing workshop for medical students and residents(住院医生).
He thinks medical training focuses too much on distancing the doctor from his or her patients, and poems can help close that gap.
Third-year resident Andrea Schwartz was one of the workshop regulars. She said, “I think there's no other profession other than medicine that produces as many writers as it does. And I think that is because there's just so much power in doctors and patients interacting when patients are at their saddest.” Not everyone believes that's what doctors should do, though.
Rafael said, “I was afraid of how people might judge me, actually. In the medical profession, as many people know, we must always put the emergency first. But, you know, that kind of treatment, if it's happening in the hospital, very regrettably, sadly, results in a bad outcome. The family is sting by the bedside. The patient hasn't survived the cancer. Don't we still have a role as healers there?”
In a poem titled “Health”, Rafael writes of the wish to live forever in a world made painless by our incurable joy. He says he will continue teaching students. helping patients and wring poems, his own brand of medicine.
1.What message does the writer attempt to convey in Paragraph 2?
A.The present relationship between patients and doctors.
B.The significance of medical training.
C.The impact of poetry in medical treatment.
D.Poetry and medical work have much in common.
2.What does Andrea Schwaflz think of poetry?
A.It comforts patients' family.
B.It has nothing to do with doctors.
C.It contributes to medical work.
D.It keeps doctors away from patients.
3.Which of the following can best describe Rafael Campo's view on poetry?
A.It can provide a useful tool for doctors.
B.It requires a lot of spare time.
C.it has little effect on patients' conditions.
D.It should be included in emergency treatments.