International Health Humanities Network Membership

Nicole Defenbaugh

I am an Associate Professor of Health Communication, Narrative and Performance with the University of South Florida - Morsani College of Medicine. I am also the Director of Education in the Department of Family Medicine and Director of Advance Care Planning in the Department of Community Health at Lehigh Valley Health Network in Allentown, PA. My PhD blends narrative, autoethnography (cultural analysis of perseonal narrative) and performance studies to examine the construction of illness identity and communication skills and behaviors of health care professionals. As an interdisciplinary scholar I bridge multiple areas in the humanities to teach empathic listening, leadership, cultural humility, and resiliency to nurses, residents, and physicians across the network. 

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Roxana Delbene

Roxana Delbene is a doctoral candidate  in the Medical Humanities Program at Drew University, Madison, NJ. She holds a Ph.D. in Sociolinguistics from the University of Pittsburgh, and a M.S. in Narrative Medicine, from Columbia University.

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ROXANA Delbene

Roxana Delbene obtained a Ph.D. in linguistics from the University of Pittsburgh and she gained a Masters in Narrative Medicine from Columbia University. She is currently a doctoral candidate in medical humanities at Drew University.  She has published articles in Communication, Medicine & Ethics, Spanish in Context, Critical Inquiries in Language Studies, Lamar Journal of the Humanities, among others. She is currently working on illness narratives of contested diseases and the problem of credibility

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Roxana Delbene

Roxana Delbene received her Ph.D. in Hispanic Linguistics from the University of Pittsburgh in 2002. She is interested in the contributions of Applied Linguistics, including Interactional Sociolinguistics, Discourse Analysis, Sociopragmatics and Narrative analysis to the study of health, and healthcare communications. She is currently a Master of Science canditate in the Narrative Medicine program at Columbia University.

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Jacqueline DeLeo

I am a nurse and currently work as a Legal assistant.  I have a BA in religious studies and have worked in Liberia, Cambodia and Guatemala as a medical volunteer.  My passion is literature, especially genres dealing with medicine, health, and social justice issues.

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Ilona Demecs

Independent artist/researcher

Health academic

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Karina Demikhova

UCSF FNP Student.  Former musician. 

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Zsofia Demjen

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Zsófia Demjén is Senior Lecturer in Applied Linguistics at University College London, Institute of Education. Her research areas include health communication, medical humanities and illness discourse, specifically depression, schizophrenia, and cancer, and her methods include discourse analysis, corpus analysis, stylistics, and metaphor analysis. Zsófia aims to develop new understandings of how linguistic choices can be: vehicles for expressing the lived experience of illness; symptomatic of mental disorders; sources of evidence of attitudes towards health(care); and tools for community-building among people with similar conditions. In addition, she is interested in intercultural and professional communication, as well as language creativity. She has published in theMedical Humanities among othersSylvia Plath and the Language of Affective States: Written Discourse and the Experience of Depression (2015, Bloomsbury) and co-editor of

Further information

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Sailaja Devaguptapu

I am working as a Senior Research Officer, IIHMR University in India. I initiatied Health Humanities course at my University as an elective. Found it extremely useful to connect deeper to my students, facilitate reflections, catharsis and empower both at the individual and collective level.

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Tony Devaney

I am a semi retired former Careers and Training Advisor and a performance poet with a background in Industry, Commerce, Education and The Arts. As a Careers Advisor I worked for many years with long term unemployed, socially disadvantaged and special needs clients. I was also involved with developing creative and expressive arts in the curriculum in South Birmingham schools. 

I became severely disabled with Fibromyalgia and rapid onset Rheumatoid Arthritis back in 2004, and was virtually housebound for some time. I have experienced a degree of social recovery in recent years - initially through sharing my own creative writing, narrative and poetry in the area of healthcare. This has led to collaborative work as a service user and health researcher, working alongside local NHS staff at all levels to develop a Recovery focused approach to service provision. I have also been engaged in mentoring and supporting people using mental health services to develop and publish their own creative work and personal narrative.

It was through my own experience of mental health problems and a period of therapy in my early thirties, that I first became aware of the importance of poetry and creative arts as a powerful aid to healing. In the early stages of therapy I began writing spontaneous poems and personal reflections. My poems have continued to 'arrive' ever since. For the last thirty years or more I have been writing and performing my poetry to large and small groups all over Britain and abroad. 

I am currently involved as a service user researcher/consultant and project team member, with the 'Creative Practice as Mutual Recovery' research project, based mainly in Birmingham. I have also become a Fellow of The Institute of Mental Health in Nottingham.

I am a member of the College of Medicine and The Complementary and Alternative Medicine Birmingham Research Alliance (CAMBRA), based at Birmingham University. 

My particular interest and involvement with Recovery focused initiatives within Health and Care Worcester NHS Trust (HACW) has included co-editing and presentation of the original Recovery Vision and Pledge document to the Board of Directors and gaining of their approval to implement Recovery based training and practices across the whole of the Service. I was also involved with the initial design and development of the 'Big Recovery' website and newsletter. The HACW 'Big Recovery' project is part of wider National developments with Implementing Recovery and Organisational Change (ImROC).

As current HACW Resources sub group lead and as a poet and narrative practitioner, I have a particular interest in developing the Creative Reflections area of the Recovery website. This includes Art, Poetry, Recovery narratives and Digital stories from service users and carers. The website also invites contributions from Health Staff, in a true spirit of 'mutual recovery.' I still co-edit the Recovery Newsletter, which contains news and updates on developments with Recovery Education College, Staff and Peer support training and ImROC, as well as art, poetry and narrative contributions from service users, carers and staff

As a member of Suresearch, a Birmingham University based network of mental health service users and their allies in Research and Education, I have become involved with several different research projects. These include 'Creative Practice as Mutual Recovery' and another research project exploring the effects of current mental health service provision on people's sense of Self and identity. 

As someone living with a long term disabling illness, it is great for me now to be working alongside so many creative individuals and finding that we can all help each other along the way. Whether this is towards full physical and mental recovery and training or employment - or 'social recovery' and learning to live creatively with ongoing health problems, there is real value in our work.

For more information on the Recovery ethos in Health and Care Worcester NHS Trust, go to the following link at:

http://www.hacw.nhs.uk/our-services/big-recovery/

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