MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
As Head of Oncological Surgery and the Gynecology Clinic at Berlin's Charite Comprehensive Cancer Center, Jalid Sehouli is one of the world's leading cancer specialists. Every day, he experiences situations in which conversations take on a life-or-death significance.
Delivering bad news is one of the most difficult tasks we face in life, especially for professionals such as doctors, police, or crisis intervention personnel, yet it is rarely touched on during training.
Over the course of their career, a doctor will hold conversations with around 200,000 patients and their relatives that invariably involve delivering good or bad news. Either way, existential questions will arise, and the way the news is delivered is vital: recent studies show that it has a significant impact on patients' quality of life and the way they experience treatment.
Mixing his wide-ranging professional experience with personal stories, Sehouli describes the emotions and perspectives of those who have to give and receive bad news from a broad perspective. His book can be helpful for anyone who has to deliver bad news-managers, friends, or parents.
Contents:
1. Who Needs This Book, and Why a Doctor Had to Write It. 2. Breaking Bad News Well. 3. On the Search for Good News. 4. Moscow. Appendix: Help for Helpers, Recipients and Relatives.
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Taylor & Francis (CRC Press)
Publication date: September, 2019
Pages: 112
Weight: 263g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Medical Study and Teaching Aids, Oncology, Public Health