In contemporary medical education, there is a growing emphasis on developing not only clinical expertise but also humanistic, ethical, and reflective capacities among healthcare professionals. Central to this educational shift is the recognition that empathy, effective communication, and patient-centered care are critical to improving health outcomes. Medical storytelling has emerged as a transformative pedagogical approach, engaging learners emotionally and intellectually through narrative. By incorporating the personal, clinical, and communal experiences of patients, families, and clinicians, storytelling provides a multi-dimensional perspective on illness, healing, and recovery. Unlike traditional didactic methods, narrative-based learning fosters deep reflection, encouraging learners to connect biomedical knowledge with the lived realities of care. This reflective practice enhances professional identity formation, empathy, and ethical sensitivity, ultimately contributing to more compassionate and holistic healthcare delivery. Integrating storytelling into health professional education offers a dynamic method to bridge the gap between technical competence and human-centered care, enriching both teaching and learning experiences
Oladipo et al. (Tue,) studied this question.