Differences in the Communication of Cancer Diagnoses by Different Health Professionals and the Impact of Oncologist Communication on Patients’ Emotions
Identifiers
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12020/1763ISSN: 2072-6694
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16132444
Author/s
Ruiz-Sancho, E.M.; Perez Nieto, Miguel Ángel; Román, Franciso J.; León, Leticia; Sánchez Escamilla, Francisco; [et al.]Date
2024Document type
articleÁrea/s de conocimiento
PsicologíaMateria/s Unesco
3201.05 – Psicología clínica3207.01 – Oncología
3206.02 – Comunicación médico-paciente
Abstract
The field of healthcare is increasingly adopting a humanistic perspective in the physician–
patient relationship. One of the more salient aspects being studied is the communication between
the two. This study serves a dual purpose. Our initial aim was to study how a cancer diagnosis is
disclosed to patients by different physicians (GPs/other specialists/oncologists). Secondly, we set
out to study how the way in which oncologists normally communicate with their patients impacts
variables such as a patient’s anxiety, depression, coping mechanisms, and perception of both their
health and their quality of life. A total of 177 patients answered a battery of questionnaires on
sociodemographic and disease data: the SPIKES protocol, the EORTCQLQ-COMU26, and the ADAF
screening questionnaire. The analyses recorded medium or high scores for some of the steps in the
SPIKES protocol when delivering the diagnosis, and significant differences were observed for some of
them among different physicians. The level of a cancer patient’s satisfaction with the communication
by oncologists was related to their levels of anxiety, depression, vulnerability, and perception of
their health and quality of life. Better communication strategies are called for among all healthcare
professionals to facilitate the task of breaking bad news to their patients





