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Leading Through Stories: Transforming Healthcare Narratives

In a recent episode of a thought-provoking podcast, the profound impact of digital storytelling in healthcare was explored through a captivating conversation with Pip Hardy and Tony Sumner, co-founders of Patient Voices UK, and Laura Mazzoli Smith from the University of Durham. As industry pioneers, they delved into the evolution of digital narratives and their increasing significance in medicine, touching on the transformative power this art form has on healthcare education and patient experiences.

The discussion began by charting the origins of digital storytelling in healthcare, highlighting the initial technological challenges faced in creating compelling narratives. The pioneers emphasized the ethical principles that have guided their work, such as ensuring free accessibility of stories, upholding the choice of storytellers to remain unanonymized, and maintaining the integrity of their narratives. The episode also addressed the struggle with terminology in the field of digital storytelling and the importance of language in the impact of storytelling on health and wellness.

Further into the conversation, the focus shifted to the techniques used in crafting digital stories and the journey from the early days of cobbling technology together to the current use of sophisticated editing software. The speakers shared the importance of building a resource bank of learning objects and the challenges they encountered in demonstrating the tangible impact of these stories within healthcare settings. A significant highlight was the discussion on the use of trigger warnings before presenting sensitive content and the ongoing efforts to measure the impact of digital storytelling to secure funding.

A poignant moment in the podcast was the reflection on the milestones achieved over the past two decades, such as the prestigious British Medical Journal Award won in 2010, which provided external validation for their work. The episode previewed the digital storytelling festival planned for 2024 in Zakynthos, encouraging community participation and story submissions. The narrative of a parent of a child with depression, developed during a six-week online workshop, was showcased as an example of the adaptability and therapeutic potential of digital storytelling during challenging times.

The conversation then welcomed Dr. Laura Mazzoli Smith, who shared her involvement with digital storytelling in medical humanities at Durham University. She provided insights into the Narrative Practices Lab’s formation and its mission to bridge theory and practice in making medical humanities more impactful in healthcare. The significance of narrative in health contexts was emphasized, discussing the challenges and opportunities in creating stories that can influence attitudes and behaviors within healthcare systems.

In the final chapter of the podcast, the guests engaged in a discussion about the upcoming launch of the Narrative Practices Lab and the importance of fostering dialogue around narrative practices. They shared anecdotes of the profound effects that narrative practices have had, such as influencing the Royal College of Nursing to overhaul their curriculum and inspiring a doctor to change her approach to patient consultations. The episode also highlighted the training of new storytelling facilitators in East Africa and a documentary capturing the influence of digital storytelling in African communities.

This podcast episode was a celebration of the remarkable power of storytelling to change lives and strengthen the fabric of healthcare communities. It illuminated the healing threads of digital narratives in modern medicine and the revolutionary role they play in patient care. The episode underscored the importance of building communities through digital narratives and the therapeutic power of storytelling in transforming patient experiences.


Patient Voices UK

Pip Hardy

A childhood love of stories drew Pip into a degree in English Literature that led into education, educational publishing, writing, editing and the development of open, distance and e-learning materials, with a sideline in psychodynamic counselling. For many years she wrote and edited management, business and healthcare education programmes until her epiphany in relation to digital storytelling and its potential for transforming health and social care. She was awarded a distinction for her MSc dissertation looking at digital storytelling as a means of transforming healthcare education and service delivery. Pip is now investigating the role and impact of digital storytelling in healthcare for her PhD.

She is an honorary research fellow at the University of Salford’s Centre for Nursing, Midwifery and Collaborative Research, a Fellow of the RSA, and a visiting teaching fellow in Manchester Metropolitan University’s Faculty of Health, Psychology and Social Care. She served for seven years on the voluntary board of directors of Cintra, a not-for-profit public sector interpreting agency and is currently on the board of the Centre for the Advancement of Interprofessional Education (CAIPE).

Tony Sumner

Tony’s story began, not in the sunny brightness of the California of Pip’s childhood, but in the leafy green lanes of rural Hampshire (old, not New!). Degrees in Physics and Astronomy led him into the aerospace industries of the Falklands crisis and the computer industries of the Silicon Fen.

As the millennium changed and our two protagonists met, he was likewise drawn into the development of open, distance and e-learning materials before digital storytelling became part of his own story, and set the scene for the sequel. Tony brings a quarter of a century’s experience in software engineering and development, quality assurance and training as well as the logical eye of a scientist to bear on our work.

Tony is a Fellow of the RSA and is embarking on a PhD to consider the opportunities for using new technologies, such as digital storytelling, to promote reflection and develop insight.


Durham University Digital Storytelling

Laura Mazzoli Smith

Drawing on her multi-disciplinary background (anthropology, literary studies, sociology) Laura’s work primarily focuses on educational identities and progression across the life course, with an anti-reductionist stance to educational questions which foregrounds inclusion, health and wellbeing. She is concerned with foster inginterdiscipinary dialogue and intergrated theorising across domains and approaches, important in linking social, philosophical and policy concerns. Laura’s work therefore bridges education and health, in particular public health and she is a member of Fuse, one of the UK Public Health Research Centres of Excellence. Laura has a particular methodological interest in narrative and auto/biographical approaches and narrative pedagogy. She is co-lead of the Narrative Practices Lab, within the Discovery Researh Platform for Medical Humanities. Laura created the NCL+ Advanced Award in Digital Storytelling at Newcastle University and she contributes to Digital Storytelling Durham.


About Leading Through Stories

Everyone has a story to tell—and what we do with that story can create lasting impact. Every episode, Leading Through Stories, helps unravel the how and why of digital storytelling with host Kristy Wolfe.

Life is made up of meaningful moments—which ones do you want to share?


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Digital Stories Belong in Curriculum & Communities with Dr. Mike Lang Co-Created

A few years ago, we were still explaining to healthcare providers why stories mattered. Now we’re watching digital storytelling get built into a nursing curriculum, shape research plans, and gather real communities around hard conversations. I’m joined by Dr. Mike Lang, founder of Common Language Digital Storytelling and assistant professor in the University of Calgary Faculty of Nursing, for a candid update on what has shifted and what’s coming next.Episode Key MessagesMike’s new role in the University of Calgary Faculty of Nursing and what it unlocks for digital storytelling in health and wellnessEmbedding digital stories into curriculum for specific learning outcomes and student conversationsStrategic partnerships and why a facilitator collective helps the work spread with qualityUganda milestones and how community-led stories drive maternal, child, and adolescent health changeCalgary Story Slam highlights and how stories open space for hard topics like grief and lossFormat changes for the Story Slam and why live attendance feels differentWhat the Common Language retreat builds through story share, deep craft talk, and momentumGrowth in facilitator training and the increasing involvement of researchersNew initiatives at U of C including Nurse Story, the Healing Lens Research Lab, and research on SIDS grief supportMike’s next meaningful moment idea and why noticing it mattersOther Links MentionedRead this episode's blog postWatch the 2026 Common Language Story SlamLearn more about the work in Uganda & East AfricaAbout Our GuestDr. Michael Lang is an Assistant Professor (Teaching and Research) in the Faculty of Nursing at the University of Calgary and Director of the Healing Lens Research Lab, a transdisciplinary research and creative practice lab dedicated to advancing documentary film and digital storytelling as rigorous, ethical, and impactful methodologies in health and wellness contexts. Situated within the Faculty of Nursing, the Lab brings together health researchers, clinicians, filmmakers, digital storytelling facilitators, educators, and community partners to explore how stories, when created and mobilized with care, can shape education, influence practice, and support individual and collective wellbeing. Dr. Lang’s work sits at the intersection of health research, documentary filmmaking, and knowledge translation, with a particular focus on how narrative and visual practices can deepen understanding of illness, caregiving, patient experience, and human flourishing. Over the past fifteen years, he has facilitated the creation of more than 1,000 digital stories with patients, family caregivers, healthcare providers, students, and community members, and has trained over 100 facilitators through Common Language Digital Storytelling, an international organization he founded to support ethical storytelling practice in healthcare, education, and community settings. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  1. Digital Stories Belong in Curriculum & Communities with Dr. Mike Lang
  2. What Changes When We Treat Stories Like Data with Dr. Katharine Smart
  3. Through Her Lens: Cameras For Girls with Amina Mohamed
  4. Double the Magic: Storytelling for Healing and Impact with Melody Williamson
  5. When Science Meets Story: Lessons from a PhD Defense with Becky McCall
Common Language DST facilitator trainings are open for registration.
Learn more here.
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