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English
Oxford University Press Inc
09 April 2023
"No one goes into healthcare with the intention of hurting people, or wanting to come off as callous, cold, or unfeeling.

Fortunately, most people working in healthcare understand that kindness and compassion are key, even foundational to success in the care they provide to patients and families. And yet, all too often, there are instances when contact with healthcare is tainted by experiences ranging from vaguely annoying or abrasive to outright emotionally assaultive. Patients may confront experiences that chip away at their sense of pride and personhood; this can be as subtle as being kept waiting for an appointment, as insidious as being required to wear a plastic hospital bracelet that tracks them according to an institutional number or code, as jarring as being referred to as an aberrant body part - the proverbial ""GI bleed in room two"" or ""breast tumor in room three.""

Dignity in Care aims to provide readers with what they need to know about the humanity of care and the tone of care; and how they can engage in these facets of care in a thoughtful and meaningful way that will satisfy their patients' needs to be seen and appreciated as ""whole persons."" The author will explore how the humanity of care can get overlooked and how to avoid this happening. It will teach how to communicate better with patients, helping them to feel not just cared for, but cared about. Sir William Osler said, ""The good physician treats the disease; the great physician treats the patient who has the disease."" Dignity in Care applies this outlook to all of healthcare, because many people can gain technical competency, but success within healthcare requires more."

By:  
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 238mm,  Width: 163mm,  Spine: 16mm
Weight:   416g
ISBN:   9780199380428
ISBN 10:   0199380422
Pages:   184
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Harvey Max Chochinov is a Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Manitoba and a Senior Scientist at the CancerCare Manitoba Research Institute.His more than 300 career publications have broached diverse topics such as communication, depression, quality-of-life, suicide, vulnerability, spirituality, and existential distress towards end-of-life. He has also led a large program of research targeting issues related to dignity within the healthcare setting.

Reviews for Dignity in Care: The Human Side of Medicine

This is a book of profound humanity, wisdom, and insight. Chochinov calls clinicians to become aware not only of the patienthood of the people we serve, but also of the intrinsic dignity of their personhood-dignity that can be so easily lost in the busy-ness of healthcare. Using insights from patients' experiences and quoting the wisdom of esteemed colleagues across clinical disciplines, alongside reflections from his decades in research into the nuances of dignity, Chochinov's book is a masterclass in the art of clinical caring as a service to humanity. It should be required reading at the outset of training, and then again at regular intervals throughout clinicians' careers. * Dr Kathryn Mannix, retired consultant in palliative medicine and best-selling author of With the End in Mind and Listen: how to find the words for Tender Conversations * His latest book [is] a wonderful example of Dr. Harvey Chochinov's clear writing...Drawing on the ABCD's of Dignity-conserving Care (attitude, behavior, compassion, and dialogue), he moves into the Model of Optimal Therapeutic Communication, which was derived from focus groups with experienced psychosocial clinicians...The clinical examples are excellent, and he provides clear guidance, even when situations are not working out the way the clinician would hope...This book provides great wisdom for the experienced clinician, but if all health care undergraduate students could be guided to integrate the concepts in this wonderful book, into their care of themselves and their patients, health care could be radically transformed. * Mary L.S. Vachon, RN, RP, PhD, Psychotherapist in Private Practice; Adjunct Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto *


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