Palliative medicine draws doctors interested in easing suffering
SEATTLE — It was a personal experience that first exposed Dr. Christine Cofer to palliative medicine.
During her late teens, when her father was suffering from metastatic kidney cancer and conventional treatments could no longer help him, he started receiving hospice care.
The nurses and social workers who came into their home were a calming presence during a difficult time, Cofer, an internist, said.
"It was a really positive experience for my family."
When it was time to choose a subspecialty, Cofer, a 42-year-old former substance-abuse counselor, decided to go into palliative medicine.
As demand grows for palliative care, a field focused on alleviating pain and increasing quality of life for seriously ill patients and their families, so does the need to formally train doctors in the subspecialty.
Palliative medicine, which includes hospice care, addresses the physical, psychological and spiritual well-being of patients with advanced diseases and their family members.
Doctors must learn pain-management techniques, how to deal with the emotions of patients and how to work with a team of nurses, social workers and even spiritual advisers.
There are 62 medical-school programs across the country offering such training.
One is the University of Washington School of Medicine which, in partnership with Providence Hospice of Seattle, is piloting the only palliative fellowship program in the state.
Cofer, first physician to participate in the University of Washington program, said her interest in the humanistic side of medicine attracted her to palliative care.
"It was sort of a natural step for me," Cofer said. Palliative medicine "allowed me to practice medicine the way I was taught in medical school — you spend more time with people to talk about the things that contribute to suffering."
Most medical students are exposed to palliative and hospice care in school and in residencies, but until recently, formal training and certification in the field has not been widely available.
Palliative medicine was designated a subspecialty in 2006 by the American Board of Medical Specialties and Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. The board offered the first certification exam last year.
- Dangerous silence: Why you need to talk to...
- Portland man choreographs elaborate proposal,...
- Cathy Free: Free Lunch: Zero, nada, zilch on...
- If you want to live a long time, stay in school
- Photos: Father on military leave surprises...
- Valerie Phillips: Going beyond mixes or cans...
- Studies try to find why poorer people are...
- Poverty, hunger among retirees increasing
- Poverty, hunger among retirees increasing
21 - Combating the negative impacts of...
16 - Amy Donaldson: Sports is the antidote...
8 - Memorial Day is a time to remember...
4 - About Utah: Story of Salt Lake airmen's...
4 - If you want to live a long time, stay...
3 - New approach tested for high blood...
2 - Chicago teen is 'the Justin Bieber of...
1






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments