Lauren Shurson Lauren Shurson

Embodying the Clinical Story: Incarnation and the Practice of Presence in Healthcare

Burnout, compassion fatigue, fragmented care—these are not abstract terms. They are the daily reality of modern medicine. Clinicians are stretched thin, patients often feel unseen, and both sides of the stethoscope carry the weight of disconnection.

And yet research keeps showing something striking: when clinicians practice presence—full attention, attunement, and availability—something changes. Patients heal better, and clinicians themselves find resilience. Anxiety can fall in as little as forty seconds of compassion (Fogarty et al., 1999). Pain responses shift under fMRI when care is patient-centered (Sarinopoulos et al., 2013). Even symptoms of post-traumatic stress are lower after medical crises when patients experience care as compassionate (Moss et al., 2019).

The medical literature calls this therapeutic presence—a way of being that goes beyond proximity to embrace mindful awareness, relational depth, and attentive listening. Theological language goes even further. “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us” (John 1:14, ESV). The Incarnation reveals God’s healing nearness. What clinical science describes in terms of lowered anxiety and improved adherence, theology frames as the very grammar of divine love: God heals by drawing near.

Presence, then, is not an optional extra. It is constitutive of healing itself. When clinicians show up with compassion, they echo the deepest pattern of healing in the universe—and they often find that what they give is also what sustains them.

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Lauren Shurson Lauren Shurson

When You Need to Be Known, Not Just Seen

There is a quiet power in being known by your provider—not just as a list of diagnoses or medications, but as a person with context, fears, and goals. In a system that often rushes, the most sacred thing we can offer is space: space for grief, for fear, for trust. This post explores why continuity in care still matters—and how patients and providers can reclaim it together.

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