Engage with Grace: Talking About the Hard Stuff

When I practiced oncology, I relished time talking with patients and their loved ones about tough decisions – when an indolent condition accelerated and it seemed time to bite the bullet and start treatment, or when a cancer stopped responding to treatment and it seemed right to shift gears and, perhaps, emphasize palliation instead of more chemo, and at every value-loaded decision checkpoint in between.

These conversations weren’t easy; speaking of levels of care, palliation and end-of-life wishes are discussions that many doctors, even oncologists, still avoid.

Posted in Communication, Empowered Patient, Ideas, Palliative Care, Patient Autonomy, Social MediaTagged , , , , , Leave a Comment on Engage with Grace: Talking About the Hard Stuff

The Checklist and Future Culture of Medicine

…Poka-yoke, a Japanese term for rendering a repetitive process mistake-proof, is familiar to some business students and corporate executives. This concept, that simple strategies can reduce errors during very complex processes, is not the kind of thing most doctors pick up in med school. Rather, it remains foreign.

Posted in Future of Medicine, health care costs, health care delivery, Life as a Doctor, Medical Education, Policy, Public HealthTagged , , , , , , , , 6 Comments on The Checklist and Future Culture of Medicine
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