Between Pain and Suffering

She sat on the exam table with her eyes closed, back straight, completely still. She was in her late 30s, a mother of young children, a professional. Months earlier, she had undergone extensive surgery for head and neck cancer, followed by radiation. The treatment was brutal. Part of her jaw was removed, and she required skin grafting. Then, she underwent multiple weeks of radiation to … Continue reading Between Pain and Suffering

The Language of the Body: Why Patient-Reported Symptoms Predict Survival

A few months ago, I met a man in his late sixties with advanced gastrointestinal cancer that had spread to his liver and lymph nodes. His wife had recently died. He lived alone in a three-story house. He knew his disease was incurable, but he was motivated; he wanted “more time.” At each visit, he told his oncologist he felt okay. His pain was controlled. … Continue reading The Language of the Body: Why Patient-Reported Symptoms Predict Survival

The Emotional Cost of Clarity

In palliative care, doing the right thing doesn’t always earn applause. Sometimes it gets you removed from the team. A recent JAMA article—”Why Good Palliative Care Clinicians Get Fired”—underscores the vulnerability of clinicians who communicate honestly about serious illness in a system that often treats dying as a failure. Even when delivered with skill and compassion, such honesty can provoke discomfort or resistance, revealing the … Continue reading The Emotional Cost of Clarity

I Only Want What’s in Your Mind and Heart”: The Origins and Science of Total Pain in Oncology

So here’s the thing about pain: it’s complicated. Last weekend I was on call when my phone rang. It was an elderly woman in her 80s with advanced cancer that had been stable. Her chart said “pain well-controlled on optimized opioid regimen” – one of those clinical phrases we use that sometimes means everything and sometimes means nothing at all. She started talking about bone … Continue reading I Only Want What’s in Your Mind and Heart”: The Origins and Science of Total Pain in Oncology

Hidden in Plain Sight: How Our Brain’s Endocannabinoid System Could Transform Pain Medicine

Opioids have a dual role in medicine, serving both as pain relievers and also their use may lead to addiction, complicating pain management conversations, especially for cancer patients. Recent research from Weill Cornell Medicine demonstrates a potential method to separate pain relief from addiction risk by manipulating brain compounds, offering hope for improved treatment strategies and quality of life. Continue reading Hidden in Plain Sight: How Our Brain’s Endocannabinoid System Could Transform Pain Medicine