Abstract

97 Background: Research on the psychological status of medical oncologists (MO) is limited. The Make Your Dialogue Count survey explored emotional experiences of licensed US MOs who treat ≥ 5 women with MBC/month as well as women ( ≥ 21 y) with MBC. Methods: A survey was conducted (June-Aug 2014) online, by paper and telephone; MOs responded online only. Patient (pt) data were unweighted. MO data were weighted by geographic region and years in practice by sex to match actual proportions in the population. Statistically significant differences between groups were determined by standard t-test of column proportions and means at the 95% confidence level (marked by *). Results: 359 pts (median age 53 y) and 252 MOs (median age 49 y; median 15 y in practice) completed surveys. At initial MBC diagnosis, more MOs than pts felt that showing care and compassion (81% vs 72%) and helping pts cope with the diagnosis (63% vs 51%) were very important, and fewer felt that referring pts to support services (24% vs 38%) was very important. More MOs practicing < 15 y vs ≥ 15 y said it was very important to refer pts to support services at first diagnosis (30% vs 19%*). Slightly more MOs with more experience perceived emotions like anxiety, commitment, hopefulness, and determination in their pts at initial diagnosis. Many MOs (42%) reported that treating women with MBC had a lot/a great deal of negative emotional impact; 81% strongly/somewhat agreed that it is unprofessional to let emotions impact treatment recommendations; and 23% reported that emotions kept them from providing some information to pts. Less experienced MOs said their emotions kept them from providing some information to their pts than their more experienced counterparts (29% vs 17%*). Most MOs (93%) did not want to give their pts false hope; yet 27% reported that in certain situations, they do not discuss with pts that MBC is incurable. Conclusions: MOs empathize with pts and feel responsible for providing them emotional/psychological support. MOs revealed the negative emotional weight of their work. MOs with less experience were more impacted by their emotions than MOs with more experience. Acknowledging MOs’ emotions is important and underscores their own need for psychological/emotional support.

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