Experiencing patient-centered care
I first encountered patient-centered care when I was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2004. I had been working in the histology department at Moffitt Cancer Center for two years when I received the news. I had just had a mammogram at another facility and was given the all-clear, but my supervisor at Moffitt urged me to get another mammogram there, and that second test found cancer. I was shocked. For a brief moment, I thought it might be a false positive – but it wasn’t. After further testing, I had all the faith in the world that my diagnosis was accurate, because I know how personally the pathologists at my institution take each slide they review. Every pathologist I know wants to find disease, treat it, and stop it in its tracks. They all want to save their patients’ lives.In my view, patient-centered pathology means looking at each slide or specimen as a patient, rather than just a tissue sample. Moffitt pathologists double-check everything they see to make sure they detect anything that could be wrong – they’re like a CSI group! The pathologists really put themselves in the patient’s shoes. They make sure the physician has everything they need to share a diagnosis with the patient. Pathologists’ work saves and extends lives, and it’s important for patients to be aware of that. As a histotechnologist myself, I know that I feel every part of the patient in the cell tissue cassette. I see the whole picture – the person themselves, rather than just the sample. Sometimes I cry when I know somebody is going to receive a cancer diagnosis, especially if I know it is a young patient. Even if I don’t see them, I feel a genuine connection to every one of my patients.