We
have tested for and interviewed many doctors who work with cancer patients.
Across the board those who are successful with natural treatments do not have
the angst that oncologists have and their success rate is much better and the
natural doctor’s patients do not look like or feel like walking cadavers. With
all due respect to this topic, it would not be difficult for these oncologists
to do the same research that all fo us can do. They have the resources to hire
a full time person to research natural cures. The caveat? It does not pay as
well. You decide the motivation! Could the "occupational stress" in fact be a pain fo the guilty conscience? TRUTH will always bare the soul!
Aiding
the Doctor Who Feels Cancer’s Toll
NOVEMBER 26, 2012, 12:01 AM 56 Comments
Jane Brody on health and aging.
The woman was terminally ill with
advanced cancer, and the oncologist who had been treating her for three years
thought the next step might be to deliver chemotherapy directly to her brain.
It was a risky treatment that he knew would not, could not, help her.
When Dr. Diane E. Meier asked what
he thought the futile therapy would accomplish, the oncologist replied, “I
don’t want Judy to think I’m abandoning her.”
In a recent interview, Dr. Meier
said, “Most physicians have no other strategies, no other arrows in their
quiver beyond administering tests and treatments.”
“To avoid feeling that they’ve
abandoned their patients, doctors throw procedures at them,” she said.
Dr. Meier, a renowned expert on
palliative care at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York,
was the keynote speaker this month at the Buddhist Contemplative Care Symposium,
organized by the New York Zen Center for Contemplative Care and the Garrison
Institute. She described contemplative care as “the discipline of being
present, of listening before acting.”
“Counter to how the American medical
system is structured, which pays for what gets done,” she said, “its approach
is, ‘Don’t just do something, stand there.’ ”
But the idea is not to do just that.
Rather, she said, the goal is to “restore the patient to the center of the
enterprise.”
Under the Affordable Care Act, she
said, unnecessary procedures may decline as more doctors are reimbursed for
doing what is best for their patients over time, not just for administering
tests and treatments. But more could be done if physicians were able to step
away from the misperception that everything that can be done should be done.
Dr. Meier’s question prompted Judy’s
oncologist to realize that what his patient needed most at the end of her life
was not more chemotherapy, but for him to sit down with her, to promise to do
his best to keep her comfortable and to be there for the rest of her days.
Occupational Distress
Patients and families may not
realize it, but doctors who care for people with incurable illness, and
especially the terminally ill, often suffer with their patients. Unable to cope
with their own feelings of frustration, failure and helplessness, doctors may
react with anger, abruptness and avoidance.
Visits may be reduced to a quick
review of the medical chart, and phone calls may not be returned. Even though
their doctors are still there, incurably ill patients may feel neglected and
depressed, which can exacerbate illness and pain and even hasten death. Dr.
Michael K. Kearney, a palliative care physician at Santa Barbara Cottage
Hospital, told the Contemplative Care conference that doctors, especially those
who care for terminally ill patients, are subject to two serious forms of occupational stress: burnout and compassion fatigue.
He described burnout as “the end
stage of stresses between the individual and the work environment” that can
result in emotional and physical exhaustion, a sense of detachment and a
feeling of never being able to achieve one’s professional goals.
He likened compassion fatigue to
“secondary post-traumatic stress disorder, or vicarious traumatization — trauma
suffered when someone close to you is suffering.”
A doctor with compassion fatigue may
avoid thoughts and feelings associated with a patient’s misery, become
irritable and easily angered, and face physical and emotional distress when
reminded of work with the dying. Compassion fatigue can lead to burnout.
In one study of 18 oncologists,
published in 2008 in The Journal of Palliative Medicine, those who saw their
role as both biomedical and psychosocial found end-of-life-care very satsifying. But
those “who described a primarily biomedical role reported a more distant
relationship with the patient, a sense of failure at not being able to alter the
course of the disease and an absence of collegial support,” the authors noted.
Healing the Healer
For doctors at risk of becoming
overwhelmed by the stresses of their jobs, Dr. Kearney recommends adopting the
time-honored Buddhist practice of “mindfulness meditation,” which involves
cultivating mental techniques for stress reduction that are native to all of us
but practiced by too few. He likened meditation to “learning to breathe
underwater, or finding sources of renewal within work itself.”
To achieve it, a person sits
quietly, paying attention to one’s breathing and whenever a distracting thought
intrudes, turning one’s attention back to the sensation of breathing. This can
help calm the mind and prepare it for a clearer perspective.
Dr. Kearney said this practice could
help doctors “really pay attention and be tuned into their patients and what
the patients are experiencing.”
“Patients, in turn,” he said,
“experience a doctor who’s not just focused on a medical agenda but who really
listens to them.”
He said mindfulness meditation helps
doctors become more self-aware, empathetic and patient-focused, and to make
fewer medical errors. It enables doctors to notice what is going on within
themselves and to consider rational options instead of just reacting.
“It’s like pressing an internal
pause button,” Dr. Kearney said. “The doctor is able to recognize he’s being
stressed, and it prevents him from invoking the survival defense mechanisms of
fight (‘Let’s do another course of chemotherapy’), flight (‘There’s nothing
more I can do for you — I’ll go get the chaplain’) and freeze (the doctor goes
blank and does nothing).” Such reactions can be highly distressing to a dying
patient.
When a patient asks for the
impossible, like “Promise me I’m not going to die,” the mindful doctor is more
likely to step back and say, “I can promise you I’ll do everything I can to
help you. I’m going to continue to care for you and support you as best as I
can. I’ll be back to see you later today and again tomorrow,” Dr. Kearney said.
Although Dr. Kearney does
mindfulness meditation for 30 minutes every morning, he said as little as 8 to 10 minutes a day has been shown helpful to practicing physicians.
In addition, doctors can factor
moments of meditation into the course of the workday — say, while washing their
hands, having a snack or coffee or pausing before entering the next patient
room to focus on breathing.
To deal with the emotional flood
that can come after a traumatic event, he suggested taking a brief timeout or
calling on a friend or colleague to go for a walk.
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