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Boles 'Breaking Bad News To Patients'

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Providing news and information to patients is part of the responsibility of healthcare providers in line with their service delivery roles. It is however notable that different news and information have different mental and or psychological health impacts on patients and as a result, they need to be communicated in a systemic way. For instance, breaking bad news in an unethical manner can have adverse health impacts on patients. Breaking bad news to patients is usually very difficult because of the emotions that it evokes. Despite this fact, it is inevitable that physicians will at some point have to deliver bad news to patients. Most medical schools offer limited training on how healthcare practitioners can be able to discuss bad news with patients and their families. It is debatable that a major reason why medical education institutions do not offer adequate training on how healthcare providers can disseminate bad news to patients is because different health …show more content…
The authors further posit that physicians are usually uncomfortable when they discuss bad news to patients because of the uncertainty that is involved because different patients react differently to bad news. Walsh, Girgis, and Sanson-Fisher (2012) offer a different perspective from the one that was provided by Boles (2015). According to the author the main reason why it is difficult for physicians to break bad news to patients is because it results in the physicians being emotionally disengaged from the patients and that patients can interpret this negatively, thus having adverse impacts on the quality of care that they are able to accrue. From this perspective it can be argued that the physicians experience difficulty in communicating bad news because they are concerned with how the news will affect the health status of the

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