Objective To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) talk. To examine whether the practice of “eliciting and responding to cues”, which has been widely advocated in the EoL care literature, promotes EoL talk. Design Conversation analysis of video- and audio-recorded consultations. Participants Unselected terminally ill patients and their companions in consultation with experienced palliative medicine doctors. Setting Outpatient clinic, day therapy clinic, and inpatient unit of a single English hospice. Results Doctors most commonly promoted EoL talk through open elaboration solicitations; these created opportunities for patients to introduce–then later further articulate–EoL consider...
Background Morbidity arising from unprepared bereavement is a problem that affects close personal re...
Objectives Despite the potential benefits of open communication about possible desires to die for pa...
Objectives Despite the potential benefits of open communication about possible desires to die for pa...
Objective To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) t...
Objective: To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) ...
Objective:To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) ta...
Objective To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) ta...
Objective To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) ta...
OBJECTIVE:To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) ta...
Background: Conversation and discourse analytic research has yielded important evidence about skills...
Background and Aims Engaging patients nearing the end of life in discussion about their subsequent t...
Background: Conversation and discourse analytic research has yielded important evidence about skills...
BACKGROUND: Conversation and discourse analytic research has yielded important evidence about skills...
Objectives To describe communication regarding cancer patient’s end-of-life (EoL) wishes by physi...
Objectives To describe communication regarding cancer patient’s end-of-life (EoL) wishes by physici...
Background Morbidity arising from unprepared bereavement is a problem that affects close personal re...
Objectives Despite the potential benefits of open communication about possible desires to die for pa...
Objectives Despite the potential benefits of open communication about possible desires to die for pa...
Objective To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) t...
Objective: To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) ...
Objective:To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) ta...
Objective To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) ta...
Objective To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) ta...
OBJECTIVE:To examine how palliative medicine doctors engage patients in end-of-life (hereon, EoL) ta...
Background: Conversation and discourse analytic research has yielded important evidence about skills...
Background and Aims Engaging patients nearing the end of life in discussion about their subsequent t...
Background: Conversation and discourse analytic research has yielded important evidence about skills...
BACKGROUND: Conversation and discourse analytic research has yielded important evidence about skills...
Objectives To describe communication regarding cancer patient’s end-of-life (EoL) wishes by physi...
Objectives To describe communication regarding cancer patient’s end-of-life (EoL) wishes by physici...
Background Morbidity arising from unprepared bereavement is a problem that affects close personal re...
Objectives Despite the potential benefits of open communication about possible desires to die for pa...
Objectives Despite the potential benefits of open communication about possible desires to die for pa...