Perspectives
5 October 1999

Diagnosing Suffering: A Perspective

Publication: Annals of Internal Medicine
Volume 131, Number 7

Abstract

The alleviation of suffering is crucial in all of medicine, especially in the care of the dying. Suffering cannot be treated unless it is recognized and diagnosed. Suffering involves some symptom or process that threatens the patient because of fear, the meaning of the symptom, and concerns about the future. The meanings and the fear are personal and individual, so that even if two patients have the same symptoms, their suffering would be different. The complex techniques and methods that physicians usually use to make a diagnosis, however, are aimed at the body rather than the person. The diagnosis of suffering is therefore often missed, even in severe illness and even when it stares physicians in the face. A high index of suspicion must be maintained in the presence of serious disease, and patients must be directly questioned. Concerns over the discomfort of listening to patients' severe distress are usually more than offset by the gratification that follows the intervention. Often, questioning and attentive listening, which take little time, are in themselves ameliorative.
The information on which the assessment of suffering is based is subjective; this may pose difficulties for physicians, who tend to value objective findings more highly and see a conflict between the two kinds of information. Recent advances in understanding how physicians increase the utility of information and make inferences allow one to reliably use the subjective information on which the diagnosis and treatment of suffering depend. Knowing patients as individual persons well enough to understand the origin of their suffering and ultimately its best treatment requires methods of empathic attentiveness and nondiscursive thinking that can be learned and taught. The relief of suffering depends on physicians acquiring these skills.

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Information & Authors

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Published In

cover image Annals of Internal Medicine
Annals of Internal Medicine
Volume 131Number 75 October 1999
Pages: 531 - 534

History

Published in issue: 5 October 1999
Published online: 15 August 2000

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Eric J. Cassell, MD
From Weill Medical College, Cornell University, New York, New York.
Current Author Address: Eric J. Cassell, MD, 28 Old Fulton Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201.

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Eric J. Cassell. Diagnosing Suffering: A Perspective. Ann Intern Med.1999;131:531-534. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-131-7-199910050-00009

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