2014
DOI: 10.1007/s11839-014-0481-3
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L’annonce de mauvaises nouvelles : émotions et feed-back dans la formation des médecins

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The physicians’ clinical demeanour would shift to include an open expression of emotions and refocus on certain ethical values [ 16 ] including the principles of benevolence or even solicitude. Recognizing their own emotions (positive or negative), Albarracin et al [ 17 ] show that the caregivers were able to better recognize the parents’ and families’ emotions, thus making it easier to answer the parents’ questions in a fitting way: “find the right tone in a mastered expression of one’s emotion” [ 18 ]. Categories 1 and 2 strongly depicted those issues concerning the child’s prognosis and the emotions of the parents and demonstrated that this strategy helped parents cope with their anxiety, no matter how serious the situation [ 3 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The physicians’ clinical demeanour would shift to include an open expression of emotions and refocus on certain ethical values [ 16 ] including the principles of benevolence or even solicitude. Recognizing their own emotions (positive or negative), Albarracin et al [ 17 ] show that the caregivers were able to better recognize the parents’ and families’ emotions, thus making it easier to answer the parents’ questions in a fitting way: “find the right tone in a mastered expression of one’s emotion” [ 18 ]. Categories 1 and 2 strongly depicted those issues concerning the child’s prognosis and the emotions of the parents and demonstrated that this strategy helped parents cope with their anxiety, no matter how serious the situation [ 3 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They expect a concrete objective and empathic response. With retinoblastoma, it is the anxiety of death that is present: parents are afraid of losing their child, their reason for living, the extension of themselves after their disappearance [12][13][14]. Thus the words chosen to announce the diagnosis must be simple, the formulation must be unambiguous and must take into account the reactions of disbelief, psychic stupor, then revolt, despair on the part of the parents.…”
Section: Diagnostic Announcementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other studies are beginning to focus more and more on the emotions of caregivers who announce a difficult diagnosis, in our study we did not evaluate this important part of the diagnostic ad equation. Meier et al stress that these situations cause the doctor negative emotions, including stress, fear of not being empathic enough, doubts about his skills, feelings of guilt, or the anxiety of being sick to turn [13,22]. If the caregiver's state of anxiety exceeds a high level of intensity, it will certainly alter the care relationship in the short and long term, hence the need for support work [14,23,24].…”
Section: Emotional Aspectsmentioning
confidence: 99%