SPIKES—A Six-Step Protocol for Delivering Bad News: Application to the Patient with Cancer
Submitted by Death Dying and... on Mar 11, 2025 - 2:54pm CDT
We describe a protocol for disclosing unfavorable information—“breaking bad news”—to cancer patients about their illness. Straightforward and practical, the protocol meets the requirements defined by published research on this topic. The protocol (SPIKES) consists of six steps. The goal is to enable the clinician to fulfill the four most important objectives of the interview disclosing bad news: gathering information from the patient, transmitting the medical information, providing support to the patient, and eliciting the patient's collaboration in developing a strategy or treatment plan for the future. Oncologists, oncology trainees, and medical students who have been taught the protocol have reported increased confidence in their ability to disclose unfavorable medical information to patients. Directions for continuing assessment of the protocol are suggested.
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Citation: Baile, W.F., Buckman, R., Lenzi, R., Glober, G., Beale, E.A. and Kudelka, A.P. (2000), SPIKES—A Six-Step Protocol for Delivering Bad News: Application to the Patient with Cancer. The Oncologist, 5: 302-311. https://doi.org/10.1634/theoncologist.5-4-302
Keywords: Clinical assessment, Oncology, Spikes, Serious Illness Conversation, Prognosis, Plan of care, End-of-life Care
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