Podchaser Logo
Home
Echoes of Courage: Insights from Cancer Patients

Echoes of Courage: Insights from Cancer Patients

Released Thursday, 22nd February 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
Echoes of Courage: Insights from Cancer Patients

Echoes of Courage: Insights from Cancer Patients

Echoes of Courage: Insights from Cancer Patients

Echoes of Courage: Insights from Cancer Patients

Thursday, 22nd February 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
Rate Episode

Dr. Erkeda DeRouen talks to Dr. Christina Gomez, a GI medical oncologist at Banner MD Anderson in Phoenix, Arizona. They talk about how doctors can best break bad news to their patients as well as her journey to writing her book, “Stopped in My Tracks”.

  • [00:00] Introduction
  • [06:08] Advice For Giving Bad News
  • [10:14] “Stopped in My Tracks: A Physician's Collection of Cancer Patients' Quotes”
  • [19:08] Sharing Quotes and Support Groups
  • [21:07] What Dr. Gomez Would Change About US Healthcare
  • [23:07] Parting Thoughts 

How Dr. Gomez Wrote “Stopped in My Tracks”

“I got all the pain, but she got all the suffering.” These were the words that touched Dr. Gomez and drove her to write her book “Stopped in My Tracks”, a collection of words and quotes from her patients under her care. Doctors are trained to send messages to their patients, both good and bad, and they pray that they can deliver them well. But instead of jotting down pearls of knowledge like how she was trained in med school, she started jotting down her patients’ words instead, which would literally stop her in her tracks. She would then ask her patients to pause, repeat their words, and she would write it down on any piece of paper she could find. Thus, her book was born.

Dr. Gomez’s Advice for Giving Bad News

Dr. Gomez has two pieces advice when it comes to giving bad news to their patients. First, is that patients want to know. She learned throughout her career that patients always want to know their diagnosis and will always ask about it. As a med student, she thought that patients wouldn’t want to know more details about their diagnosis, such as how studies might say that they only have 18 months, or that the new drug can only buy two months compared to the placebo or the standard of care. It should always be a doctor’s honour and privilege to deliver these bad news to the patients. Secondly, silence is powerful and loud and is a way to communicate with patients, especially learning how to practice our pauses. After all, our silence can and is able to heal.

Get Dr. Christina Gomez’s book “Stopped in My Tracks: A Physician's Collection of Cancer Patients' Quotes” at Itasca and Amazon, and reach out to her through her website.

 

To learn more about how MedSchoolCoach can help you along your medical school journey, visit us at Prospective Doctor

You can also reach us through our social media:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MedSchoolCoach

Dr. Erkeda’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/doctordgram/

YouTube: www.youtube.com/@ProspectiveDoctor

Show More

Unlock more with Podchaser Pro

  • Audience Insights
  • Contact Information
  • Demographics
  • Charts
  • Sponsor History
  • and More!
Pro Features