The information to the cancer patient: psychosocial and spiritual implications.

A Surbone
Author Information
  1. A Surbone: Department of Oncology, Santa Chiara Hospital, Pisa, Italy.

Abstract

The issue of whether, how and how much to tell cancer patients about their diagnosis and prognosis is confronted in different ways in different countries. This paper reflects my direct experience as a medical oncologist both in the US and in Italy. It is an attempt to describe two different ways of dealing with truth-telling in oncology and to explore their reasons and consequences.

Keywords

References

  1. Ann Oncol. 1991 Apr;2(4):273-80 [PMID: 1868023]
  2. Ann Intern Med. 1988 Jan;108(1):125-30 [PMID: 3276262]
  3. Ann Intern Med. 1984 Jul;101(1):129-37 [PMID: 6375501]
  4. Ann Oncol. 1991 Apr;2(4):244 [PMID: 1868017]
  5. JAMA. 1987 Oct 9;258(14):1939-40 [PMID: 3656607]

MeSH Term

Beneficence
Cultural Diversity
Ethics, Medical
Humans
Internationality
Italy
Medical Oncology
Neoplasms
Patient Advocacy
Personal Autonomy
Physician-Patient Relations
Prognosis
Social Conditions
Social Values
Stress, Psychological
Truth Disclosure
United States

Word Cloud

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