Publication

A randomized, controlled trial of physician postures when breaking bad news to cancer patients

Journal Paper/Review - Sep 1, 2007

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Bruera E, Palmer J, Pace E, Zhang K, Willey J, Strasser F, Bennett M. A randomized, controlled trial of physician postures when breaking bad news to cancer patients. Palliative medicine 2007; 21:501-5.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Palliative medicine 2007; 21
Publication Date
Sep 1, 2007
Issn Print
0269-2163
Pages
501-5
Brief description/objective

Medical training teaches physicians to sit when breaking bad news, though there have been no controlled studies to support this advice. We aimed to establish cancer patients' preference for physician posture when physicians break bad news using a randomized controlled crossover trial in a department of palliative care at a large US cancer center. Referred patients were blind to the hypothesis and watched video sequences of a sitting or standing physician breaking bad news to a cancer patient and 168 of 173 participants (88 female) completed the study. Sitting physicians were preferred and viewed as significantly more compassionate than standing physicians (P < 0.0001) but other physician attributes and behaviours were generally rated as of equal or more importance than posture. In summary, cancer patients, especially females, prefer physicians to sit when breaking bad news and rate physicians who adopt this posture as more compassionate. However, sitting posture alone is unlikely to compensate for poor communication skills and lack of other respectful gestures during a consultation.