Jiang Yu, Li Jun-ying, Liu Chang, Huang Mei-juan, Zhou Lin, Li Mei, Zhao Xia, Wei Yu-quan
State Key Laboratory of Biotherapy and Cancer Research Center, West China Hospital, West China Medical School, Sichuan University, Chengdu, People's Republic of China.
Support Care Cancer. 2006 Nov;14(11):1119-25. doi: 10.1007/s00520-006-0071-4. Epub 2006 Apr 19.
To investigate different attitudes of oncology clinicians toward whether and how to disclose diagnosis to patients with different stages of cancer.
A questionnaire investigating physician's demographic information and attitude toward truth telling was delivered to 256 Chinese oncology clinicians.
Two hundred thirty-two (90.6%) physicians completed the questionnaire. Of these oncology clinicians, 87.5% reported that a patient with early-stage cancer should be informed of the diagnosis, while only 40.5% believed that a patient with terminal illness should know the truth (P<0.001). Physicians who preferred to tell the truth reported that patients with early or terminal stage of cancer should be informed by the doctor-in-charge (81.3 vs 77.7%, respectively; P>0.05), immediately after the diagnosis (83.7 vs 87.2%, respectively), and in a quiet and undisturbed room (63.5 vs 68.1%, respectively; P>0.05). In stepwise multiple logistic regression analyses, no demographic information showed association with truth telling of early-stage cancer. Women doctors [odds ratio (OR), 2.25; 95% CI, 1.31 to 3.89; P=0.004] were more likely than men to want the patient to be informed of the terminal illness. Physicians with cancer relatives (OR, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.31 to 0.97; P=0.04) were less likely than physicians without cancer relatives to want the patient to be informed of the terminal illness.
Oncology clinicians differed in their attitudes toward truth telling of different stages of cancer. Physicians reported that the doctor-in-charge should be the ones to disclose the condition of the patient, immediately after the diagnosis, and in a quiet and undisturbed room.
调查肿瘤临床医生对于是否以及如何向不同癌症分期患者披露诊断结果的不同态度。
向256名中国肿瘤临床医生发放了一份调查问卷,调查医生的人口统计学信息以及对告知真相的态度。
232名(90.6%)医生完成了调查问卷。在这些肿瘤临床医生中,87.5%报告称应告知早期癌症患者诊断结果,而只有40.5%认为晚期癌症患者应该知道真相(P<0.001)。倾向于告知真相的医生报告称,早期或晚期癌症患者应由主管医生告知(分别为81.3%对77.7%;P>0.05),诊断后应立即告知(分别为83.7%对87.2%),且应在安静且不受干扰的房间内告知(分别为63.5%对68.1%;P>0.05)。在逐步多元逻辑回归分析中,没有人口统计学信息显示与早期癌症告知真相有关联。女医生[比值比(OR),2.25;95%置信区间(CI),1.31至3.89;P=0.004]比男医生更倾向于让患者知晓晚期疾病。有癌症亲属的医生(OR,0.55;95%CI,0.31至0.97;P=0.04)比没有癌症亲属的医生更不倾向于让患者知晓晚期疾病。
肿瘤临床医生对于不同癌症分期告知真相的态度存在差异。医生们报告称,应由主管医生在诊断后立即在安静且不受干扰的房间内披露患者病情。