2009, Number 3
Alleviating cancer patients’ suffering: Whose responsibility is it?
Grau J
Language: English
References: 0
Page: 52
PDF size: 75.66 Kb.
Text Extraction
In medicine, we have historically been better at learning about the body and disease than we have at understanding the human beings who come to us with the ailments. We have acted to relieve pain, consoling patients and families as a complement, but done little to understand and alleviate suffering as a fundamental part of our practice. In fact, only in more recent decades has “suffering” been conceptualized as something apart from pain, associated with distress and its causes. It was Eric T. Cassell, in his ground-breaking work in the 1980s, who posed the need to consider alleviation of suffering and treatment of illness as twin—and equally important—obligations of the medical profession.