Publication | Open Access
Attitude and Self-reported Practice Regarding Prognostication in a National Sample of Internists
440
Citations
36
References
1998
Year
Physicians (1) commonly encounter situations that require prognostication, (2) feel poorly prepared for prognostication, (3) find it stressful and difficult to make predictions, (4) believe that patients expect too much certainty and might judge them adversely for prognostic errors, and (5) vary in how they regard the key concept of being "terminally ill." These observations may have significant consequences for patient care.
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