Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 208
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-1-4422-1621-1 • Hardback • April 2012 • $99.00 • (£76.00)
978-1-4422-1623-5 • eBook • April 2012 • $94.00 • (£72.00)
Roy B. Sessions, M.D., retired from active practice in 2008 and is currently a Professor of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery at The Medical University of South Carolina. During his almost 40 year career he is responsible for over 140scientific publications, including 3 editions of Cancer Of The Head And Neck: A Multidisciplinary Approach (with Harrison and Hong). The first of these won the Doody International Medical Book of the Year Award among 4000 other textbooks. He has been associated with Sloan Kettering Cancer Center/Cornell Medical College and Beth Israel Cancer Center/Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City and served 10 years as the Chairman of the Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery at Georgetown University School of Medicine. During his academic career, he served as a consultant to the NCI, and was a member of the Editorial Board of their journal, the PDQ. Dr. Sessions has lectured extensively in the U.S. and internationally, including Germany, China, UK, Italy, France, Ecuador, Brazil, and Japan.
Author’s Note on Terminology
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Part I: Intellectual Considerations
Prologue
1- Influences on My Development
2- Why the Book?
3- Protecting What’s Good through the Educational Process: Capitalizing on the Gene Pool
4- Oncology Is Not for the Emotionally Stingy
5- Hope
6- Finding New Purpose after Enduring the Cancer Olympics
7- Changing Times, Changing Methods, Unchanging Mission
8- Seeking Functionality within a Moral Framework
9- A Practical Adaptation of the Original Oath in Search for Modern Relevance
10- Death and Dying: Natural and Otherwise
11- Suicide: Patient Conceived, Planned, and Consummated
Part II: Interacting with Cancer Patients and Their Families
12- Informal Physician-Patient Communication
13- Patient Confidentiality and Special Patient Circumstances
14- Essentials of Communication Skills: Listening, Hearing, Reading Body Language
15- Gaining the Patient’s Confidence
16- The Cancer Specialist as a Teacher of the Patient and Family: The Lead-Up to Treatment
17- The Physician as an Educator after Treatment: Using the Cancer as a Tool
18- The Journey from the Referring Doctor to the Oncologist: Uncertainty, Anxiety, and Hope along the Way 125
19- More on Physician Leadership: Being in Charge
20- Influences on Cancer Patients’ Attitudes and Receptiveness
21- Communication When There Is Still Optimism for Cure
22- Communication Once Treatment Failure Is Obvious
23- Hospice Care
24- Facing Death and Dying with the Patient
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Going through cancer treatment experience is difficult not only for patients but also for doctors. In a new book, titled The Cancer Experience: The Doctor, The Patient, The Journey, Dr. Roy Sessions deals with a variety of emotion-related and ethics issues that encompass much of the basis of the cancer treatment experience....Sessions aims to stimulate a dialogue about matters related to cancer treatment as well as the spiritual aspects of hope and other factors relating to the plight of cancer patients and their families.
— EMaxHealth: Daily Health News
This is a book much needed, and no one is more qualified than Roy Sessions—by vast experience and personal character—to have written it.
— Sherwin B. Nuland M.D., clinical professor of surgery, Yale University School of Medicine; fellow, Yale Institute for Social and Policy Studies; author of the National Book Award-winning, How We Die: Reflections on Life's Final Chapter
Dr. Sessions, a seasoned, highly respected surgeon, presents an informative, personalized tour through the frightening, often mysterious world of the cancer experience. The self-revelatory tone of the book, particularly in terms of explicating the overriding importance of the relationship between physician and patient, and the central bioethical principles guiding that collaboration, provides invaluable information and support to cancer patients and the people with whom they share their lives.
— Stephen A. Green, M.D., M.A., clinical professor of psychiatry at Georgetown University School of Medicine and co-editor of Psychiatric Ethics
From the foreword: This is a book replete with clinical wisdom earned through the author’s dedication to the care of some of medicine’s most desperately ill patients. It will be of interest and instructional value to medical students, aspiring and practicing oncologists—medical, surgical, radiation—as well as physicians generally. But Sessions intends his book for the general public as well. Importantly, he makes the case that a better understanding of doctors by patients and their families is beneficial for all concerned. The cases Sessions describe will resonate with our own experiences or those of our families and friends. His thoughts extend well beyond the cancer experience to include other serious life-threatening trauma and illness.
— Edmund D. Pellegrino, M.D., M.A.C.P., Georgetown University