Kiora I'm with you, and I understand what you're mean about the complexity of the situation. Also, just because the patient says it's okay to discuss with the relatives, there is no need to do so in front of the patient, for the very reason that the relatives may feel uncomfortable.
I have personal experience of this, when my mother was dying (and she was reconciled to this), the consultant told my sister and I in a very cold and clinical way exactly what was going on with her (gave us an update), I was stunned by the brutal (to me) information I was receiving and very uncomfortable with the fact that my poor mother was within earshot. And my mother I think sensed my feelings, and reached over and slapped the consultant on the leg (albeit weakly) as if to tell him off.
Anyway, if I know death is imminent or days or hours away, I wouldn't want a ball-by-ball account of when to expect it.
Doctors and how they come across
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