Communication Strategies for Sharing Prognostic Information With Patients

Abstract
Communicating prognosis, the anticipated course of living with an illness, is a core clinical skill and a foundation of the patient-clinician relationship. Clinicians find such communication challenging. Concerns about professional helplessness when caring for a patient with a disease with a poor prognosis and the desire to avoid difficult patient and personal emotions can lead to an understandable reluctance to share difficult news with patients and families. Clinicians also struggle to find the right words to balance hope with concern when sharing difficult news.1 While receiving prognostic information is difficult for patients, not receiving prognostic information can create anxiety and may distance patients from their clinicians, who are often aware of the prognosis but do not share it with patients. Delaying or avoiding communication about prognosis also risks patients not having the information they need to make decisions and leads to missed opportunities to set and achieve goals that reflect what matters most to them. Identify all potential conflicts of interest that might be relevant to your comment. Conflicts of interest comprise financial interests, activities, and relationships within the past 3 years including but not limited to employment, affiliation, grants or funding, consultancies, honoraria or payment, speaker's bureaus, stock ownership or options, expert testimony, royalties, donation of medical equipment, or patents planned, pending, or issued. Err on the side of full disclosure. If you have no conflicts of interest, check "No potential conflicts of interest" in the box below. The information will be posted with your response. Not all submitted comments are published. Please see our commenting policy for details.