how to break bad news: physicians' and nurses' attitudes.

Authors

mohammad arbabi department of psychiatry, tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, iran psychiatry and psychology research center, tehran university of medical science, tehran, iran psychosomatic ward, imam khomeini hospital, tehran,iran

ava roozdar psychiatry and psychology research center, tehran university of medical science, tehran, iran

mohammad taher psychiatry and psychology research center, tehran university of medical science, tehran, iran

samira shirzad psychiatry and psychology research center, tehran university of medical science, tehran, iran

abstract

objective: bad news disclosure is one of the most complex tasks of physicians. recent evidences indicate that patients' and physicians' attitude toward breaking bad news has been changed since few years ago. the evidence of breaking bad news is different across cultures. the aim of this study is to evaluate the attitude of medical staff toward breaking bad news to provide a clinical guideline in iran. methods: a descriptive study was conducted during 2008-2009 on a sample of 100 medical staff (50 physicians and 50 nurses) at cancer institute of imam khomeini hospital. the subjects' demographic characteristics and their attitudes toward the manner of revealing the diagnosis were registered in a questionnaire. results: the majority of the physicians (86%, n=43) and nurses (74%, n=37), mostly the older and more experienced, tended to reveal the diagnosis to patients. only a few physicians (8%, n=4) had been trained how to disclose bad news, which discloused diagnosis more than non trained ones. physicians and nurses preferred to inform the patients about the diagnosis when either the patients were alone or in the presence of their spouse respectively. only a few physicians (14%) and nurses (24%) agreed to explain life expectancy to patients. conclusion: compared to past, physicians and nurses are more willing to share cancer diagnosis with patients. however, lack of adequate communication skills in caregivers, and their concerns about managing patients' emotional reactions reduce their tendency to disclose bad news to the patients. therefore, training physicians and nurses to expose bad news to the patients seems to be necessary.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

How to Break Bad News: Physicians’ and Nurses’ Attitudes

OBJECTIVE Bad news disclosure is one of the most complex tasks of physicians. Recent evidences indicate that patients' and physicians' attitude toward breaking bad news has been changed since few years ago. The evidence of breaking bad news is different across cultures. The aim of this study is to evaluate the attitude of medical staff toward breaking bad news to provide a clinical guideline in...

full text

Teaching How to Break Bad News: Comparing Role-Play and Group Discussion on Practice of Medical Interns in Jahrom Medical School

Introduction: The Main challenge in training about breaking bad news is selection of appropriate educational method. This study was performed to assess the results of role-playing method versus group discussion in training about this skill. Methods: This was an interventional double blind study, performed in 2009-2010 in Jahrom University of Medical Sciences. 30 medical students were involved ...

full text

mothers experiences on how care givers break bad news about their perinatal mortality

mothers experiences on how care givers break bad news about their perinatal mortality    sereshti m [1] *, izadi a [2]     received: 24 may , 2013 accepted: 18 aug , 2013    abstract  background & aims : breaking bad news to parents in perinatal periods is an especially difficult and important part of maternal education and counseling. this qualitative study aimed to explore maternal experience...

full text

A comparative investigation of clients\' attitudes toward breaking bad news to patients with cancer

Background: Truth disclosure is one of the major challenges for physicians with cancer patients. The attitude toward breaking news adopted by individuals depends on their cultural background. The present study was conducted at Ardabil University of Medical sciences, Ardabil, Iran, to investigate the attitudes of Turkish-speaking patients with cancer and their families to the disclosure of bad n...

full text

Lisp: Good News, Bad News, How to Win Big

Lisp has done quite well over the last ten years: becoming nearly standardized, forming the basis of a commercial sector, achieving excellent performance, having good environments, able to deliver applications. Yet the Lisp community has failed to do as well as it could have. In this paper I look at the successes, the failures, and what to do next. The Lisp world is in great shape: Ten years ag...

full text

An Investigation of Physicians’ Attitudes to Disclosure of Bad News to Patients in the City of Qom

Background and Objectives: Most physicians believe that telling lies and withholding the truth is not permissible. However, it appears that holding the phenomenon telling the truth to be absolute or unconditional is not acceptable either. This study was conducted to examine Qom City physicians’ attitudes with regard to revealing the influential news to patients. Methods: This was a des...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later


Journal title:
iranian journal of psychiatry

جلد ۵، شماره ۴، صفحات ۱۲۸-۱۳۳

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023