dc.description.abstract |
Whether to tell patients with cancer about their diagnoses and prognoses is a matter of great debate. While many
argue the importance of giving this information to facilitate informed decision-making, others argue that this same
information can extinguish hope. Although there is some evidence that disclosure of this information is now
commonplace in many Northern and Western settings, there are very few data about this issue from resource-poor
nations describing physicians’ decision-making regarding whether to disclose this information. Using a combination of
ethnographic and other qualitative methods including participant observation, semi-structured interviews, informal
interviews, and a review of key documents in Northern Tanzania, we map some of the salient issues in this setting. Like
their colleagues in many other parts of the world, Tanzanian physicians often withhold diagnostic and prognostic
information from patients. In addition, however, to the cultural arguments often used to justify this practice, issues of
treatment availability and patient poverty also influenced the physicians’ disclosure practices. Expatriate and Tanzanian
physicians practicing in Northern Tanzania often had different approaches to informing patients of their diagnoses and
prognoses. Some Tanzanian physicians advocated the use of a ‘‘roundabout’’ approach to disclosure, arguing that it
was more reflective of the normal mode of discourse in Tanzania than the more direct approach advocated by many of
their expatriate colleagues. Expatriate physicians and some of their Tanzanian colleagues felt that such an indirect
approach often left patients confused, or indeed, uninformed. |
en_GB |