Commentary, How To Speak Doctor

Lying on Purpose, Lying by Omitting … Lies Put Patients at Risk
Cheree Cleghorn | June 7, 2009

Los Angeles Times

“Everybody lies at some point,” says Dr. Sharon Parish, a professor of clinical medicine at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City who practices at Montefiore Medical Center. They do it out of embarrassment, to please the doctor, to avoid a lecture.

“But doctors and patient advocates agree that in most cases, when patients lie, they’re pretty much asking for trouble. Even when telling the truth is unappealing, “getting into a lying relationship with your physician is really far more perilous,” says Peter Clarke, director of the Center for Health and Medical Communication at USC and co-author of the 1998 book “Surviving Modern Medicine.”

Source: Los Angeles Times, June 8, 2009

Topics: Commentary, How To Speak Doctor

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