Doctors with bad news
seen as less compassionate
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[February 28, 2015]
By Andrew M. Seaman
(Reuters) - Regardless of how they frame the discussion, doctors who
deliver bad news may be seen as less compassionate by their patients, a
new study suggests.
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Patients who watched videos of fictional interactions between
doctors and patients felt the doctors delivering bad news were less
compassionate than those giving good news, researchers found.
Until recently, doctors and researchers believed that doctors who
delivered bad news in an empathetic tone would be seen as sincere,
said Dr. Eduardo Bruera, the study’s lead author from the University
of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.
But it seems the news itself has an impact on the way patients see
doctors.
The researchers showed 100 cancer patients two videos. In one, an
actor playing a patient with advanced cancer was told by a doctor
that treatment options had been exhausted. The other video showed
the same scenario with a similar-looking doctor saying there may be
some treatment options.
On a scale of 0 to 50, with 50 being the least compassionate,
patients gave the doctor with good news a score of 19, compared to
26 for the doctor with bad news.
Fifty-seven patients said they preferred the doctor delivering the
more optimistic message, while 22 preferred the doctor delivering
the less optimistic news.
“The patients consistently perceived the doctor who gave the more
optimistic message as more compassionate,” Bruera said.
He said the findings may help explain why doctors intuitively have a
difficult time delivering bad news to their patients.
“It’s unfortunate, but it’s the reality of life that when the doctor
needs to give the patient bad news, the perception of that patient
may be that of a less compassionate doctor,” Bruera said.
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There needs to be additional research into the findings, Dr. Teresa
Gilewski of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City
said in an editorial accompanying the new study in JAMA Oncology,
online February 26.
“For example, would the patient perception be different with an
in-person interaction, a longer discussion, a personal relationship
with the physician, or at a different time in the patient’s
illness?” wrote Gilewski.
The researchers say future research should account for the trust
patients have with their doctors, too.
Still, they also suggest researchers should craft techniques to help
doctors deliver bad news without the content affecting the patients’
perceptions of their compassion.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1MZitVK and http://bit.ly/1MZizgi
JAMA Oncology 2015.
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