Spark [Robert_Klitzman]_When_Doctors_Become_Patients(Boo | Page 336

Index 325 David, a psychiatrist (comments on) disclosure, 147 invulnerability beliefs, 34, 53 overidentification risks, 266 patient role acceptance, 38–39 preventive health behavior, 53 retirement decision-making, 232 spirituality, 244 workaholism, 214 David, a psychiatrist, post-interview, 309 Deborah, a psychiatrist (comments on) boundary conflicts, 77 communication problems, 108, 277 crying, 219 denial, 204 disclosure conflicts, 148, 154, 163–164, 165, 166, 167, 173 discrimination, 129–130, 136, 139 doctoring style changes, 257, 286 end-of-life care, 290 expectations level, 124–125 identity losses, 103 invulnerability beliefs, 34, 36 medical uncertainty, 183 physician arrogance, 110, 111, 112 preventive health behavior, 52 self-doctoring behaviors, 41–42, 46 spirituality, 247–248 stigma, 127 time conflicts, 120 workaholism, 215–216 Deborah, a psychiatrist, post-interview, 309 deception. See disclosure conflicts deference problem, 75–76, 77–78 defiance vs. acceptance attitude, odds interpretation, 198–203 denial strategies overview, 25–28 and boundary conflicts, 74–81 invulnerability beliefs, 33–36 in odds interpretation, 203–204 self-diagnosing stage, 28–33 with self-doctoring, 42, 221 with workaholism, 215–216 depression, 3–4, 101, 219–220, 246 Dewey, John, 27 diagnostic testing post-illness sensitivity, 281 resistance as denial, 31–32 as self-doctoring, 44 as time conflict consequence, 117, 196 diets, as health behavior challenge, 52–53, 99–100 dignity losses, 102–105 disability insurance, 293 disclosure conflicts overview, 11, 145–146, 177 colleague reactions, 161–165 costs of, 155–161, 293 family members, 176–177 with patients, 165–173 patterns of, 146–155 preventive health behaviors, 55–56 public-at-large, 173–175 with retirement decision-making, 228 silence, 149–154, 157–161 See also discrimination, types of discrimination, types of overview, 127–128, 143 compassion failures, 129–130, 131–132 dying label, 136–137 employment losses, 128–129, 134 legislation about, 129, 133 and psychiatric symptoms, 133–135 and self-blame, 140–141 symptom misinterpretation, 131 for trainees, 137–138 work limitations, 130–131, 132–133, 135–136, 138–139, 141–143 See also disclosure conflicts; stigmatization; peripheralization dismissal of symptoms from arrogance, 109–112 emotional distress, 219 mild symptoms/side effects, 93–99, 109–110 psychiatric symptoms, 100–102, 108 distance style, post-illness, 268–269