Content area

Abstract

Background. In many countries, physicians are reluctant to disclose unfavorable medical information to patients with advanced cancer and instead give the bad news to the family. Methods. The authors modified standard communication workshops to help Italian senior oncologists overcome cultural, social, and attitudinal barriers to disclosure of diagnosis and prognosis. Results. Fifty-seven physicians participated; 88% believed the workshops would improve their medical practice. Many pursued further training and organized communication skills programs of their own. Conclusions. Communication skills workshops can be modified to meet educational and social norms and help clinicians acquire the interpersonal skills needed for honest communication with patients.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Overcoming cultural barriers to giving bad news: Feasibility of training to promote truth-telling to cancer patients
Author
Costantini, Anna, PHD; Baile, Walter F, MD; Lenzi, Renato, MD; Costantini, Massimo, MD; Ziparo, Vincenzo, MD; Marchetti, Paolo, MD; Grassi, Luigi, MD
Pages
180-5
Publication year
2009
Publication date
Sep 2009
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
08858195
e-ISSN
15430154
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
893744092
Copyright
American Association for Cancer Education 2009