Enacting Woundedness and Compassionate Care for Recurrent Metastatic Breast Cancer

2021 ◽  
pp. 104973232110509
Author(s):  
Wayne A. Beach

This analysis integrates Arthur Frank’s timeless revelations about woundedness within the communication context of an oncology interview. A Patient whose life is threatened by recurrent metastatic breast cancer claims personal knowledge and visibly demonstrates impacts from illness experiences. Conversation Analysis (CA) was conducted on a video recorded and transcribed case study involving a Patient, her husband, and co-present oncologists. By focusing on narratives as talk-in-interaction, grounded exemplars are provided of primary interactional achievements: How woundedness gets displayed and responded to with empathy and compassionate witnessing; Patient’s flooding out with emotion and potential embarrassment; attempting to regain control and resume talking about her condition; and the serial organization of crying and laughter when managing noticeably delicate moments. In this interview, woundedness is not discounted or dismissed but recognized as legitimate suffering meriting shared commiseration. Understanding how to enact humane and communicatively competent skills during emotionally uncertain moments can enhance medical education.

2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 666-678 ◽  
Author(s):  
Britta Wigginton ◽  
Zoe O. Thomson ◽  
Carolina X. Sandler ◽  
Marina M. Reeves

There is growing consensus around the limited attention given to documenting the process of intervention development, specifically the role of qualitative research. In this article, we seek to describe a missing piece of this process: how qualitative research, and related methodologies and theories, informs intervention development. We use our research as a case study of “reflexive intervention development.” We begin by describing our interview study, consisting of 23 in-depth interviews with women diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer, and go on to detail our methodological framework and research team. We then explain how this interview study directly informed our development of the intervention materials, allowing us to attend carefully to language and its potential implications for women. We conclude by inviting researchers to reflect on the knowledge production process that is inherent in intervention development to consider not only their role in this process but also the role of qualitative research.


2014 ◽  
Vol 17 (7) ◽  
pp. A575-A576
Author(s):  
R. Copher ◽  
M. DiBonaventura ◽  
E. Basurto ◽  
C. Faria ◽  
R. Lorenzo

2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 104-108
Author(s):  
Eric H. Lee ◽  
Salman Otoukesh ◽  
Amir Abdi pour ◽  
Gayathri Nagaraj

Hemolytic anemia in the setting of malignancy is a rare manifestation of paraneoplastic syndrome with significant morbidity. Here we discuss a case involving metastatic breast cancer presenting with severe hemolytic anemia and renal failure secondary to thrombotic microangiopathy of malignancy. This case discusses the workup for secondary hemolytic anemia, a possible role for therapeutic plasma exchange in this setting, as well the current understanding of the management of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia of malignancy.


The Analyst ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 142 (11) ◽  
pp. 2038-2049 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rahul Vijay Kapoore ◽  
Rachael Coyle ◽  
Carolyn A. Staton ◽  
Nicola J. Brown ◽  
Seetharaman Vaidyanathan

1 step of PBS wash followed by quenching with 60% methanol supplemented with 70 mM HEPES results in minimal metabolite leakage.


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