Narrative Medicine, Dementia, and Alzheimer’s Disease: A Scoping Review
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Research Question and Conceptual Framework
2.3. Search Strategy
2.4. Eligibility Criteria
2.5. Study Selection
2.6. Data Extraction and Synthesis
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviation
| NM | Narrative Medicine |
References
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| Database | Database-Specific Search Strings | Filters Applied: |
|---|---|---|
| PubMed | (“dementia” OR “Alzheimer*” OR “cognitive impairment” OR “memory loss”) AND (“narrative medicine” OR “narrative approach” OR “narrative-based medicine”) | Title/Abstract, English, Publication types: Research Articles, Reviews, Case Reports, Editorials, Letters, Conference Abstracts, Posters, up to October 2024 |
| PsycInfo (via EBSCOhost) | TI (“dementia” OR “Alzheimer*” OR “cognitive impairment” OR “memory loss”) OR AB (“dementia” OR “Alzheimer*” OR “cognitive impairment” OR “memory loss”) AND TI (“narrative medicine” OR “narrative approach” OR “narrative-based medicine”) OR AB (“narrative medicine” OR “narrative approach” OR “narrative-based medicine”) | Filters: Peer-reviewed journals, English, up to October 2024 |
| Web of Science | TS = (“dementia” OR “Alzheimer*” OR “cognitive impairment” OR “memory loss”) AND TS = (“narrative medicine” OR “narrative approach” OR “narrative-based medicine”) | Document Types (Article, Review, Proceedings Paper), Language: English, up to October 2024 |
| MEDLINE (via Ovid) | (dementia OR Alzheimer* OR cognitive impairment OR memory loss) AND (narrative medicine OR narrative approach OR narrative-based medicine). | English, Publication types: Research Article, Review, Case Study, Editorial, Letter, Conference Abstract Date: up to October 2024 |
| Author (References), Year | Country | Type of Publication | Participants | Target | Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lawrence (2016) [23] | U.S.A. | Communication | N/A | Women with breast cancer; Staff in nursing homes for people with dementia. | Dementia and breast cancer |
| Tsai (2019) [24] | U.S.A. | Research Article/ End of Life Vignettes | A third-year medical student | A female with Alzheimer’s disease | Alzheimer’s disease |
| Joo, Li & Whitlock (2023) [25] | U.S.A. | Review | N/A | People with dementia; People with post-operative cognitive decline. | Dementia |
| Cerasoli et al. (2019) [29] | Italy | Communication | N/A | People with dementia | Dementia |
| Lingler et al. (2022) [26] | U.S.A. | Research Article | 500 Black or African American adults | People with Alzheimer’s disease | Alzheimer |
| Puto et al. (2022) [32] | Poland | Communication | N/A | People with Dementia | Dementia |
| Merrilees (2023) [27] | U.S.A. | Mini review | N/A | People with Dementia | Dementia |
| Caza (2013) [31] | Canada | Brief review | N/A | People with Dementia | Older adults and patients with dementia |
| Guidi (2019) [30] | Italy | Conference Proceedings | 267 older adult patients (169 patients with dementia) | People with dementia | Dementia and other pathologies |
| Solomon & Lawlor (2018) [28] | U.S.A. | Chapter | N/A | People with dementia and autism spectrum disorder | Alzheimer’s disease |
| Author (Reference), Year | Keywords | Citation of “Narrative Medicine” | Aims | Type of Intervention/Tools | Results/Issues | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lawrence, L. S. (2016) [23] | Braille; cancer; groups; narrative medicine; texts | NM cited in the title of the article and keywords | To explore how the narrative method in group settings enhances emotional processing, interpersonal connections, and mutual understanding. | Narrative tools: writing, reading, and sharing personal stories. | 1. Enhancement of Connection and Empathy; 2. Facilitation of Emotional Expression; 3. Impact on Self-Understanding (deeper introspection); 4. Therapeutic Benefits. | |
| Tsai, J. (2019) [24] | Palliative care, home hospice, student, narrative medicine, home visit, medical education, Alzheimer’s, end of life | NM cited in the keywords only | A third-year medical student recounts an experience during a home visit of hospice and palliative care workers to a patient with Alzheimer’s disease. | End of Life Vignettes/physician’s narrative | The medical student participates in a home visit and shares their observations and impressions of the interaction, the older adult woman’s behavior, and the symptom challenges associated with her Alzheimer’s disease. | |
| Joo, Li & Whitlock (2023) [25] | Cognition, surgery, postoperative neurocognitive disorder, dementia | NM cited in the abstract | To explore how anecdotal evidence, NM, primary cohort studies, epidemiological research, and dementia literature can be connected to understanding long-term postoperative cognitive decline. | Anecdotal | NM enhances clinical management of postoperative cognitive decline by addressing overlooked subjective experiences, aligning patient and physician perspectives, and supporting more effective, personalized care alongside traditional scientific approaches. | |
| Cerasoli et al. (2019) [29] | Neuropsychiatric symptoms, dementia, narrative medicine, diary, assessment tools. | NM cited in the keywords and in the text | Discuss the potential advantages and implications of the diary for the ecological assessment of neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) in subjects with dementia. | Diaries | The use of the diary: 1. enables a more accurate description of symptoms; 2. facilitates the identification of triggering factors; 3. supports a personalized approach to patient management; 4. promotes active involvement of caregivers; 5. it can be utilized in research to monitor the effectiveness of interventions. | |
| Lingler et al. (2022) [26] | Alzheimer’s disease, Health equity, Narrative medicine, Recruitment | NM cited in the keywords only | To promote diversity in Alzheimer’s research by examining how culturally tailored narratives can inspire trust and encourage participation among African American adults | A culturally tailored narrative approach is implemented through the use of specific narrative materials. | Culturally tailored narratives build trust, reduce perceived burdens, and highlight benefits, effectively increasing African American participation in Alzheimer’s research and improving inclusivity, especially among those with prior research experience. | |
| Puto et al. (2022) [32] | Narrative; older people; long-term care; narrative medicine; identity. | NM cited in the abstract only. | To explore the role of NM in older adult care, particularly for patients with dementia. | NM skills | Incorporating narrative into medical care enables older adults to share their life stories, recognize their identity and uniqueness, and foster personalized care. It emphasizes that identity development continues throughout life and that narrative is a vital form of self-expression. | |
| Merrilees (2023) [27] | Oral history, personal narrative, values, aging, dementia oral history, dementia | NM cited in the text (Introduction). | The article examines the use of personal narratives to enhance person-centered care, improve empathy, reduce stigma, and support dignity and inclusivity for individuals with dementia and their caregivers. | Narrative-based intervention centered on the use of oral history techniques and narrative approaches, including active listening and open-ended interviewing. | Integrating personal narratives and oral history into dementia care fosters empathy, dignity, and collaboration, enhances communication, reduces stigma, and strengthens person-centered approaches, promoting social justice in aging and dementia contexts. | |
| Caza (2013) [31] | Autobiographical memory, aging, dementia, narrative medicine | NM cited in the keywords only. | Presentation of a brief review of empirical data regarding the efficiency of narrative methods in the well-being of healthy older adults and individuals with dementia | Different narrative methods (examination of life, reminiscence, and autobiography) | Different narrative methods, based on memory evocation, would promote psychological adaptation among healthy older adults and those with dementia. | |
| Guidi (2019) [30] | Older adult, fragility, communication, narrative medicine | NM cited in the title and abstract. | Presenting the experience of applying NM through the Calgary Cambridge Guide (CCG) in a post-acute operating unit. | Narrative interviews are used at three stages: opening interview, periodic communication during hospitalization, discharge, or death | Results highlight the importance of integrating communication into treatment plans and the need to enhance healthcare workers’ communication skills. | |
| Solomon & Lawlor (2018) [28] | Alzheimer’s disease; Autism spectrum disorder; Dementia | NM cited in the abstract. | Through the lens of narrative and existential phenomenology, ethnographic accounts and published narratives by individuals with Alzheimer’s Disease were examined to understand their experiences of ‘wandering.’ | Narrative-based interviews. | Writing as a way of contesting and resisting the decline of memory appears very significant in understanding the experience of dementia and ‘wandering’. | |
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Share and Cite
Covelli, V.; Visco, M.A.; Feyles, M.; Sirotich, A.C.; Marelli, A. Narrative Medicine, Dementia, and Alzheimer’s Disease: A Scoping Review. Healthcare 2025, 13, 3321. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13243321
Covelli V, Visco MA, Feyles M, Sirotich AC, Marelli A. Narrative Medicine, Dementia, and Alzheimer’s Disease: A Scoping Review. Healthcare. 2025; 13(24):3321. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13243321
Chicago/Turabian StyleCovelli, Venusia, Marina Angela Visco, Martino Feyles, Angelica Cristal Sirotich, and Alessandra Marelli. 2025. "Narrative Medicine, Dementia, and Alzheimer’s Disease: A Scoping Review" Healthcare 13, no. 24: 3321. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13243321
APA StyleCovelli, V., Visco, M. A., Feyles, M., Sirotich, A. C., & Marelli, A. (2025). Narrative Medicine, Dementia, and Alzheimer’s Disease: A Scoping Review. Healthcare, 13(24), 3321. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13243321

