Watchful waiting: Difference between revisions
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imported>Howard C. Berkowitz (New page: '''Watchful waiting''', also called '''expectant management''', is an approach used in healthcare, when a potentially serious condition has been diagnosed, but is also known to be slow to ...) |
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'''Watchful waiting''', also called '''expectant management''', is an approach used in healthcare, when a potentially serious condition has been diagnosed, but is also known to be slow to develop and where treatment options are limited or have major side effects. The term may first have come into wide use in the context of [[prostate cancer]], where it involves closely monitoring the cancer without active treatment such as surgery or radiation therapy. It also has been applied to potentially self-limiting conditions such as acute low back pain; watchful waiting in this context may include limited comfort care but no attempt at [[disease-modifying treatment]]. | '''Watchful waiting''', also called '''expectant management''', is an approach used in healthcare, when a potentially serious condition has been diagnosed, but is also known to be slow to develop and where treatment options are limited or have major side effects. The term may first have come into wide use in the context of [[prostate cancer]], where it involves closely monitoring the cancer without active treatment such as surgery or radiation therapy. It also has been applied to potentially self-limiting conditions such as acute low back pain; watchful waiting in this context may include limited comfort care but no attempt at [[disease-modifying treatment]]. |
Revision as of 20:32, 15 June 2009
Watchful waiting, also called expectant management, is an approach used in healthcare, when a potentially serious condition has been diagnosed, but is also known to be slow to develop and where treatment options are limited or have major side effects. The term may first have come into wide use in the context of prostate cancer, where it involves closely monitoring the cancer without active treatment such as surgery or radiation therapy. It also has been applied to potentially self-limiting conditions such as acute low back pain; watchful waiting in this context may include limited comfort care but no attempt at disease-modifying treatment.