Perspectives on treatment pathways – Patricia

 

Patients do have the right to refuse treatment and Patricia thinks that it is important for the health professional to provide the patient with all the information they need to decide.

Transcript

I’m, it’s not all of them for sure and not all oncologists for sure and not all nurses, but it’s a, it requires a huge culture change and it doesn’t just require a culture change on the part of the healthcare provider, it requires a culture change on the part of patients. You need to be responsible for your care. So if you are ill, you need to do something about it and then you need to share in the care and the treatment if that happens. For cancer patients that’s extraordinarily important. People have the right to refuse chemotherapy, they have the right to refuse radiation if they want to. It may not always be the sensible choice but the point is they have the right to do it. What the, what the healthcare providers need to do, is to make sure that the patient and family has the information they need to go ahead and make their decision and then to help them make that decision, to make the right decision and to make it through. I know people who have refused chemotherapy when it was recommended; again that’s a personal choice. You have to decide. That it’s, some people look at it as, as toxic. It is toxic. Radiation is toxic, nobody was meant to have that kind of radiation put in their body but it’s better than dying because that’s the alternative as far as I look at it.


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