Let us have the conversation: serious illness communication in oncology : definitions, barriers, and successful approaches

Article indépendant

SHILLING, Danielle M. | MANZ, Christopher R. | STRAND, Jacob J. | PATEL, Manali I.

Serious illness communications are crucial elements of care delivery for patients with cancer. High-quality serious illness communications are composed of open, honest discussions between patients, caregivers, and clinicians regarding patient's communication preferences, expected illness trajectory, prognosis, and risks and benefits of any recommended care. High-quality communication ideally starts at the time of a patients' cancer diagnosis, allows space for and response to patient emotions, elicits patients' values and care preferences, and is iterative and longitudinal. When integrated into cancer care, such communication can result in improved patient experiences with their care, care that matches patients' goals, and reduced care intensity at the end of life. Despite national recommendations for routine integration of these communication into cancer care, a minority of patients with cancer receive such communication. In this chapter, we describe elements of high-quality serious illness communication, patient-, clinician-, institution-, and payer-level barriers, and successful strategies that can routinely integrate such communication into cancer care delivery.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/EDBK_431352

Voir la revue «American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual meeting, 44»

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