There's a bit in the papers today about hospitals giving cancer treatment and the custom that seems to have grown up of patients, when they have had their last treatment and been declared in remission, celebrating by reading a poem and loudly ringing a (ship's) bell amidst applause from staff and family.
But other patients, who have failed in their treatment, have said that they find this public celebration on the wards incredibly distressing. Shrewsbury Hospital have now gone to the lengths of removing the bell. MacMillan are rather on the fence over it, saying that the ceremony is entirely optional.
I believe a similar sort of system applies at slimming clubs if you lose a couple of pounds or something on your weekly weigh-in, (pour encourager les autres, as the Frenchies would say) but I know Mrs O, when she used to attend, always felt uncomfortable with it.
Once can see both points of view - what do you think?