Total Care for Childhood Cancer.
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概要
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Because of great improvements in the treatment of childhood cancer in the past 30 years, the survival rate of patients is now 70%. The ultimate goal of childhood cancer treatment is to enable patients to enjoy a good quality of life as they reach adulthood. During the treatment process-diagnosis, treatment, off-treatment, and long-term follow-up-it is important that the physician is aware of the various problems that arise at each stage and makes every effort to support and involve the patient and the patient's family in dealing with them. It is very difficult in Japan to achieve this goal because of a chronic lack of suitably trained personnel. Most hospitals depend solely on overworked doctors and nurses and receive very little support from professional psychosocial personnel. There is a need to involve a variety of trained professionals in the treatment process and for physicians to undergo training in medical communication skills. Furthermore, it is important that patients are truthfully and fully informed of their condition as early as possible with regard to their age and development. Truth-telling ensures the best possible level of communication between the physician and the patient and promotes the patient's involvement and cooperation in treatment, ultimately enhancing his or her emotional and social development.
- 特定非営利活動法人 日本小児血液・がん学会の論文
特定非営利活動法人 日本小児血液・がん学会 | 論文
- The Parent's Emotional Adaptation to the Children's Malignant Disease
- Side Effect of Cranial Radiation in Childhood Acute Leukemia
- Red Blood Cell Volume Distribution Width in Normal Children and in the Patients with Various Kinds of Hematological Disorders.
- Effective Conditioning of Donors for Granulocyte Transfusions with Recombinant Human Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor.
- Two Infant Girls of CNS Leukemia with Chronic Subdural Hematoma