Compassion in healthcare is often seen as optional or impractical in fast-paced clinical settings. However, patients' lived experiences reveal that a healthcare provider's presence, tone, and touch deeply impact recovery, trust, and safety. Using personal stories and direct appeals, this narrative urges healthcare professionals to view compassion as fundamental to professional care. It discusses risks of emotional detachment, highlights compassion fatigue, and emphasizes small human gestures in building trust and safety. Simple compassionate acts—eye contact, gentle tone, brief touch—significantly enhance patient trust, reduce fear and loneliness, and improve safety. Emotional detachment increases risks of missed symptoms and preventable adverse events. Compassionate care also protects healthcare workers from burnout when supported by a healthy organizational culture. Compassionate care is foundational, not supplementary. In a data-driven healthcare system, reconnecting with humanity is both a moral and professional imperative. One day, any of us may be the patient; how we care today shapes how we will be cared for tomorrow.
Rarani et al. (Fri,) studied this question.