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Bearing the wait

If you have ever waited anxiously for the results of a blood test or biopsy, you may be surprised to learn that some psychologists at the University of California, Riverside, believe that there can be a bright side to those dark days you spent worrying (“Two Definitions of Waiting Well.” Emotion 2015 Oct 12 [epub ahead of print]).

Surveying more than 200 recent law school graduates every 2 weeks during their 4-month wait for the results of the California bar exam, the researchers discovered that those who rode it out anxiously and pessimistically handled the bad news of failure “more productively.” And they welcomed the good news “more joyously” than did their peers who had “suffered little during the wait.”

Dr. William G. Wilkoff

While these psychologists’ findings may be of some help to aspiring lawyers or freshly minted physicians waiting to hear if they have passed their boards, I don’t think we should take them to heart when ordering lab work or imaging studies on our patients. After all, flunking the bar exam may be a life-altering event, but it isn’t a life-ending one such as learning that the biopsy you waited a week for has detected a cancer that has metastasized beyond the reaches of radiation and chemotherapy.

The bottom line is that waiting for potentially bad news is anxiety provoking regardless of whether it is for the results of a qualifying exam or a simple CBC. And, as physicians, it is our responsibility to do whatever we can to minimize that anxiety by following some simple commonsense rules of courtesy and decency.

First, we must understand that even low-risk preop screening lab work that we may view as innocuous may trigger significant anxiety in many patients. For example, a patient who knew someone whose leukemia was discovered as the result of a preop screening CBC may worry that a similar fate will be revealed by his blood test.

Second, we should ask ourselves every time we order some lab work or imaging study if it is really necessary. Are we just trying to cover our behinds and protect ourselves from a malpractice suit? Do we know what we are going to do with an equivocal borderline result? An unnecessary blood test isn’t just a waste of someone’s money and a symptom of sloppy medicine. It can be the cause of an anxiety-provoking wait for the patient.

Finally, if we are going to order a lab test, even if it is just for preop screening, it is our obligation to inform the patient of the result in a timely fashion. In my universe, that means the same day that the physician receives the result. In today’s world with its panoply of communication platforms, informing the patient can be as simple as leaving a message on a system previously approved by the patient. Obviously, bad or complicated news should be delivered directly by the physician with a phone call. Of course, informing the patient of even normal lab work results takes time, but it is the courteous and decent thing to do and signals to the patient that she has a physician who cares. If it seems like too much work, it may be that the physician is ordering too much lab work.

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.”

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If you have ever waited anxiously for the results of a blood test or biopsy, you may be surprised to learn that some psychologists at the University of California, Riverside, believe that there can be a bright side to those dark days you spent worrying (“Two Definitions of Waiting Well.” Emotion 2015 Oct 12 [epub ahead of print]).

Surveying more than 200 recent law school graduates every 2 weeks during their 4-month wait for the results of the California bar exam, the researchers discovered that those who rode it out anxiously and pessimistically handled the bad news of failure “more productively.” And they welcomed the good news “more joyously” than did their peers who had “suffered little during the wait.”

Dr. William G. Wilkoff

While these psychologists’ findings may be of some help to aspiring lawyers or freshly minted physicians waiting to hear if they have passed their boards, I don’t think we should take them to heart when ordering lab work or imaging studies on our patients. After all, flunking the bar exam may be a life-altering event, but it isn’t a life-ending one such as learning that the biopsy you waited a week for has detected a cancer that has metastasized beyond the reaches of radiation and chemotherapy.

The bottom line is that waiting for potentially bad news is anxiety provoking regardless of whether it is for the results of a qualifying exam or a simple CBC. And, as physicians, it is our responsibility to do whatever we can to minimize that anxiety by following some simple commonsense rules of courtesy and decency.

First, we must understand that even low-risk preop screening lab work that we may view as innocuous may trigger significant anxiety in many patients. For example, a patient who knew someone whose leukemia was discovered as the result of a preop screening CBC may worry that a similar fate will be revealed by his blood test.

Second, we should ask ourselves every time we order some lab work or imaging study if it is really necessary. Are we just trying to cover our behinds and protect ourselves from a malpractice suit? Do we know what we are going to do with an equivocal borderline result? An unnecessary blood test isn’t just a waste of someone’s money and a symptom of sloppy medicine. It can be the cause of an anxiety-provoking wait for the patient.

Finally, if we are going to order a lab test, even if it is just for preop screening, it is our obligation to inform the patient of the result in a timely fashion. In my universe, that means the same day that the physician receives the result. In today’s world with its panoply of communication platforms, informing the patient can be as simple as leaving a message on a system previously approved by the patient. Obviously, bad or complicated news should be delivered directly by the physician with a phone call. Of course, informing the patient of even normal lab work results takes time, but it is the courteous and decent thing to do and signals to the patient that she has a physician who cares. If it seems like too much work, it may be that the physician is ordering too much lab work.

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.”

If you have ever waited anxiously for the results of a blood test or biopsy, you may be surprised to learn that some psychologists at the University of California, Riverside, believe that there can be a bright side to those dark days you spent worrying (“Two Definitions of Waiting Well.” Emotion 2015 Oct 12 [epub ahead of print]).

Surveying more than 200 recent law school graduates every 2 weeks during their 4-month wait for the results of the California bar exam, the researchers discovered that those who rode it out anxiously and pessimistically handled the bad news of failure “more productively.” And they welcomed the good news “more joyously” than did their peers who had “suffered little during the wait.”

Dr. William G. Wilkoff

While these psychologists’ findings may be of some help to aspiring lawyers or freshly minted physicians waiting to hear if they have passed their boards, I don’t think we should take them to heart when ordering lab work or imaging studies on our patients. After all, flunking the bar exam may be a life-altering event, but it isn’t a life-ending one such as learning that the biopsy you waited a week for has detected a cancer that has metastasized beyond the reaches of radiation and chemotherapy.

The bottom line is that waiting for potentially bad news is anxiety provoking regardless of whether it is for the results of a qualifying exam or a simple CBC. And, as physicians, it is our responsibility to do whatever we can to minimize that anxiety by following some simple commonsense rules of courtesy and decency.

First, we must understand that even low-risk preop screening lab work that we may view as innocuous may trigger significant anxiety in many patients. For example, a patient who knew someone whose leukemia was discovered as the result of a preop screening CBC may worry that a similar fate will be revealed by his blood test.

Second, we should ask ourselves every time we order some lab work or imaging study if it is really necessary. Are we just trying to cover our behinds and protect ourselves from a malpractice suit? Do we know what we are going to do with an equivocal borderline result? An unnecessary blood test isn’t just a waste of someone’s money and a symptom of sloppy medicine. It can be the cause of an anxiety-provoking wait for the patient.

Finally, if we are going to order a lab test, even if it is just for preop screening, it is our obligation to inform the patient of the result in a timely fashion. In my universe, that means the same day that the physician receives the result. In today’s world with its panoply of communication platforms, informing the patient can be as simple as leaving a message on a system previously approved by the patient. Obviously, bad or complicated news should be delivered directly by the physician with a phone call. Of course, informing the patient of even normal lab work results takes time, but it is the courteous and decent thing to do and signals to the patient that she has a physician who cares. If it seems like too much work, it may be that the physician is ordering too much lab work.

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.”

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