Literature DB >> 2360058

What cancer tells us about general practice. Birth of an hypothesis.

P Aiach1, D Cebe, D Broclain.   

Abstract

We are presenting in this paper a study about general practitioners' behaviours and attitudes towards the cancer patients they take care of. To begin with, the approaching methods are presented in a critical way. The choice of these methods finds an explanation in the fact that we were looking for an information as near as possible to the real physicians' behaviours and supplying, at the same time, an important material, giving us the opportunity to undertake an interpretative analysis of the different medical cases about cancer patients (64) written by some (12) of the general practitioners (31) who had been interviewed before about cancer in their medical practice. We have tried, particularly, to point out and to illustrate with some examples the specific contribution of a chosen method compared with another one; for instance, the interviews compared to the written questionnaire, and the medical cancer cases written by the physicians compared to the interviews realized with the same general practitioners. In this paper we are also trying to report the preoccupations, the difficulties and the theoretical and methodological problems which appeared during the process of this research. Concerning the findings of this study, it is possible to assert that the main hypothesis seems coherent with the collected information: it really seems that cancer, with its social image in which fear for suffering and for dying prevail, is for the general practitioner a borderline situation in which his personal psychology and his feelings seem to play a more important part than his medical knowledge.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2360058     DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(90)90264-s

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  2 in total

1.  Family physicians and cancer care. Palliative care patients' perspectives.

Authors:  A Norman; J Sisler; T Hack; M Harlos
Journal:  Can Fam Physician       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 3.275

2.  Cancer in remission. Challenge in collaboration for family physicians and oncologists.

Authors:  M L Wood; C L McWilliam
Journal:  Can Fam Physician       Date:  1996-05       Impact factor: 3.275

  2 in total

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