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For Cancer Patients, Empathy Goes a Long Way

Research supports the idea that a few kind words from an oncologist can go a long way toward helping people with cancer understand their treatment, stick with it, cope better and maybe even have a better chance of recovery.

However, a study has found that doctors and patients aren’t communicating all that well about emotions.

Researchers recorded almost 400 conversations between oncologists and patients with advanced cancer. They listened for moments when patients expressed emotions like fear, anger or sadness, and for the doctors’ replies.

They team found that doctors used responses that encouraged patients to keep expressing their emotions only 22 percent of the time. Male doctors were worse at it than female ones: 48 percent of the men never used any of these responses, as opposed to 20 percent of the women.



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Article's Comment     ( 4 Comments )
 
 
 +5 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY FunRun   
  
[ Joined on 07/08 ]
[ Posted on July 22, 2008 ]
Post Reply
A few months ago I lost my father to cancer.  I was there when the on-call oncologist, a young man with a compassion deficit, gave him the news in a matter-of-fact way completely devoid of caring and in a great hurry to leave. 

About a week later we met with his treating oncologist who was the perfect example of how a doctor should be.... but the damage was done.  Those days of pondering his imminent death took away any passion to fight. 

While the cancer was going to take him eventually, it took him far sooner than it should have because of a doctor's failure at the human side of his job. 


 

 +4 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY Sweet Moksha Bliss   
  
[ Joined on 03/08 ]
Author of the Article [ Posted on July 22, 2008 ]
 
Dear FunRun,
Please accept my condolences on the loss of your loved one. I myself, am now faced with a ill parent.

I disturbs me so much when I hear about individuals who have such devastating experiences with health care professionals, especially in long term and palliative care.  

I have worked in many fields as a health care professional, and I also teach clinical nursing.  If there is one thing I can tell you is that compassion cannot be taught....it has to be present in some form or another.,

Perhaps for some people, it is nothing but a chrysalis that needs to be given the right environment of nurturing, opportunity and choice. 

But for other's, then again, the seed of compassion is so deeply mired in pain, anger and mostly fear, that it becomes a struggle to manifest. I have seen many people choose positions of power in health care  as a smoke screen to avoid facing what they fear the most...

....and sometimes, that is in fact, death.

Be well and great blessings to you.
Sweet Moksha Bliss (formerly 'samsara')





 
 +3 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY seg   
  
[ Joined on 11/06 ]
[ Posted on July 22, 2008 ]
Post Reply
According to Dr Hamer creator of German New Medicine(GNM) empathy and understanding goes a very long way not only for Cancers, but for ALL dis- eases.....Until mainstream medicine wake up to this fact, unnecessary dis-eases and deaths would continue to plague humanity.....Condolences to funrun and family; i lost my dad earlier this year as well ,so i know the feeling.......

 
 +2 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY Nathan   
  
[ Joined on 04/07 ]
[ Posted on July 24, 2008 ]
Post Reply
 A cancer recoverer myself, 10 years ago I was told bluntly if I didn't have treatment I would be " in serious trouble" within the month.

This put me into a state of panic and shock, I found a friend at this website http://www.friendswithcancer.com.au where they refuse to see health and healing as a battle, and my life was changed.

It's all about attitude, there should be more of the good old "bedside manner"  taught to the new breed of medicos.
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