When Abraham Chachoua, MD, walks into a patient鈥檚 room, he stays for a while. His patients are an extension of his family, and he loves to tell funny stories about his life and make them laugh. 鈥淏eing a doctor is more than just prescribing medication,鈥 says Dr. Chachoua, who learned this lesson early on.
Dr. Chachoua鈥檚 father, a primary care physician, died of multiple myeloma many years ago when he and his family lived in Australia. Visiting his father during his final days in the hospital, he observed how the oncologist never entered the room or sat down to talk to his father. 鈥淚 felt that if I ever got through medical school, I would try to do better.鈥
Now an oncologist himself and director of outpatient clinical services at 好色tv Langone鈥檚 Perlmutter Cancer Center, Dr. Chachoua has worked for 40 years in medicine. All those years of experience taught him how to be a really good doctor. Or at least that鈥檚 what he believed, until he realized he wasn鈥檛 done learning yet.
A few years ago, while he was busy looking after people with cancer, Dr. Chachoua became one himself鈥攈e was diagnosed with prostate cancer. For the first time, he found himself on the other side, which was an eye-opening experience in many ways.
鈥淚 realized that we need to be very straightforward with patients about what to expect after recovery. I wasn鈥檛 prepared,鈥 says Dr. Chachoua in this episode of Vital Signs, discussing the physical and emotional effects of cancer treatment and the lessons he learned from it.
鈥淢y experience has taught me to be a better doctor than I was,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 thought I was pretty good before, but now I鈥檓 better.鈥