Indeed, the hope is not the dominant feeling as you step rests book Manuela Wyler. It would rather anger, revolt, disgust ... and fear. The fear of cancer but of course, increasingly, the effects of treatment: this is what one denominates progress. However, reading of FMC, we feel another fear: that falling "into their hands." The fear of suffering the humiliating lack of consideration which seems, despite the effects of successive dannonce cancers plans the rule rather than the exception in the care course. A "management" - already very heavy in itself - of a cancer and the effects of treatment, will come SAdd depersonalization associated with patient status in Cancerland. "Routine" is inadmissible way we apologize. You will definitely more Ms. Wyler, but a review to squeeze into an already busy schedule. "Hello Ginette, I have a [scan] bone, you can program it when? "Barks the phone manipulative radio has long forgotten the virtues of discretion to his patient-examination. Obviously, when lon is reduced to a bone scan, compliance does not just happen. No more than the dialogue. We will have to require them, to fight step by step, word by word, beg explanation. Hiding information on side effects of radiotherapy, for example, is also optional. The author is documented by itself. Lorsquelle asks questions, prepared and relevant, they are annoying, they do not fit the existing rule which sums up: "I tell you anything, you're here to suffer, you're too stupid to understand, so let me work . "
Adolf Rudnicki is quoted: "Those who suffer and lose is always an object of scorn. "Throughout FMC, this contempt is fought on a biting tone, caustic, vitriolic, and often funny. Health professionals caught in the offense of absence of consideration are the costs of the repartee of the author. FMC says F *** paternalism in the carer neat relationship, paternalism still very much alive ... and too often suffered mum.
Read therefore, never to suffer.