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Scientific article 4. OCT 2020
  • Labour Market
  • Management and implementation
  • The Social Sector
  • Health Care
  • Labour Market, Management and implementation, The Social Sector, Health Care

One last round of chemo? Insights from conversations between oncologists and lung cancer patients about prognosis and treatment decisions

Authors:

  • Amalie M. Hauge
  • Labour Market
  • Management and implementation
  • The Social Sector
  • Health Care
  • Labour Market, Management and implementation, The Social Sector, Health Care
Staged photo: Ricky John Molloy/VIVE
Download Læs artiklen One last round of chemo? Insights from conversations between oncologists and lung cancer patients about prognosis and treatment decisions
Download Læs artiklen One last round of chemo? Insights from conversations between oncologists and lung cancer patients about prognosis and treatment decisions
  • Amalie Martinus Hauge

    Senior Researcher, MA. Social Science, Ph.D in Health Organization

    +45 40 10 39 48
    amha@vive.dk
One more chemo or one too many? The increasing use of expensive cancer treatments close to the patient's death is often explained by oncologists' failure to communicate to patients how close to dying they are, implying that patients are often both ill-prepared and over-treated when they die. This article aims at interrogating the politically charged task of prognosticating. Drawing on an ethnographic study of conversations between oncologists and patients with metastatic lung cancer in a Danish oncology clinic, I show that oncologists utilize, rather than avoid, prognostication in their negotiations with patients about treatment withdrawal. The study informs the emerging sociology of prognosis in three ways: First, prognostication is not only about foreseeing and foretelling, but also about shaping the patient's process of dying. Second, oncologists prognosticate differently depending on the level of certainty about the patient's trajectory. To unfold these differences, the article provides a terminology that distinguishes between four ‘modes of prognostication’, namely hinting, informing, calibrating and organizing. Third, prognosticating can unfold over time through multiple consultations, emphasizing the relevance of adopting methodologies enabling the study of prognosticating over time.

Authors

  • Amalie M. Hauge

About this publication

  • Financed by

    Novo Nordisk Fonden
  • Published in

    Social Science & Medicine
VIVE – The Danish Centre for Social Science Research provides knowledge that contributes to developing the welfare society and strengthening quality development, efficiency enhancement and governance in the public sector, both in municipalities, regions and nationally.
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