In clinical training, the pursuit of a cure is often framed as the paramount objective-the definitive measure of therapeutic success.Medical education reinforces this paradigm through rigorous emphasis on disease trajectories, staging algorithms, and treatment response criteria.However, during my clinical rotation, a single patient profoundly reoriented this framework, illuminating a distinction between curing and healing.Aruna, a 29-year-old woman diagnosed with metastatic synovial sarcoma, had exhausted third-line systemic therapy and transitioned to palliative care.At our initial encounter, she greeted me with a smile and a statement that disrupted my clinical lexicon: "I know there's no cure.But maybe I don't need to be cured to be okay."Her words, unaligned with the quantifiable metrics of medicine, articulated an alternative paradigm of healing-one rooted in agency, meaning, and emotional resolution.
Victor Sai (Tue,) studied this question.