Appreciation of courses on communication skills for doctors : a pilot study in the field of hemophilia
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Data di Pubblicazione:
2011
Citazione:
Appreciation of courses on communication skills for doctors : a pilot study in the field of hemophilia / E. Vegni, E. Moja, C. Biasoli, F. Peyvandi, A.R.O.C.I.N.O.M. Morfini. ((Intervento presentato al convegno Hematology conference tenutosi a Budapest nel 2011.
Abstract:
Despite a large body of literature discussing the implications of the physician as
a person in the process of caring for people with a serious chronic illness1, this
research area still seems to be unexplored in the context of hemophilia.
Aim
The aim of this study was to explore hematologists’ internal representation of a
difficult encounter with a person with hemophilia.
Method
Sample and data collection:
At the beginning of a training program on doctor-patient care in the field of
hemophilia, 48 hematologists were asked to write a story of an encounter in which
they perceived a relational difficulty with a person with hemophilia. All written
material was anonymous; the physicians’ socio-demographic data were collected.
Participants gave their consent to the use of the material for research purposes. The
study was approved by the Ethical Committee of San Paolo Hospital, Milan, Italy.
Data analysis:
The narratives were studied using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA)2.
Through interpretation of individual narratives, IPA allows the researcher to grasp
the essence of how people experience and understand the world. IPA is an iterative
inductive process that starts from careful reading of the texts, aimed at gaining a
holistic understanding of all collected narratives. The data storage was supported
by N-Vivo8.
Results
48 narratives were collected and analyzed. Three main issues were identified, each
with sub-issues:
1. Inside the relationship
This issue includes the perspectives of physicians who live inside the relationship,
and have to cope with a series of challenges involving the person with hemophilia
and their family.
a) To tell or not to tell: Breaking bad news is perceived by the physician as an
emotional difficulty more than a clinical one, which often leaves them without
words and with only one instrument to use: emotional closeness.
“A 14 year old boy, hemophilia B, HIV+…it was really terrible to tell him about
this third problem (lymphoma)…the parents would have wanted not to tell him,
but the guy was much too bright… at the end I lasted out but he didn’t…”
b) To convince them that it is normal: The contradiction that the physician
experiences daily when, on the one hand, they invite people with hemophilia
to live a normal life, but on the other hand need to make sure that they have
understood the seriousness of their condition, in a world ever less disposed to
accept imperfections.
“I explained to them that their son would be hemophilic throughout his life, and
that they should consider it as a condition and not as a disease…and that they
would have to let him be “free” growing up…”
c) The guilt: Non-acceptance of the “imperfection”, with an intolerable awareness
of the genetic burden of the disease, seems to rebound on the physician as an
emotional shadow and enter the care relationship, hindering it.
“The incredulity, the desperation, the sense of guilt of that mother… I will never forget…”
d) The ghost of maltreatment: The physician feels a responsibility to vouch for
the fondness of parents toward a young child affected by a condition – or,
contrariwise, to decide to separate a child from their family.
“A 10-month old child who presented with widespread hematomas all over the
head and one very pronounced on the buttock…the parents had been reported
by the social assistants, accused of child maltreatment…I was struck by the
loving care of these parents towards the baby…after a few days it was clear that
the child was affected by serious hemophilia A…”
2. On the borderline of the relationship
These narratives presented a series of issues that
Tipologia IRIS:
14 - Intervento a convegno non pubblicato
Keywords:
Communication skills ; Hemophilia
Elenco autori:
E. Vegni, E. Moja, C. Biasoli, F. Peyvandi, A.R.O.C.I.N.O.M. Morfini
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