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Emergency Medicine Cases

Episode 49 Effective Patient Communication, Patient Centered Care and Patient Satisfaction

Emergency Medicine Cases

Dr. Anton Helman

Education, Health & Fitness, Courses, Medicine, Science

4.7602 Ratings

🗓️ 11 August 2014

⏱️ 74 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

If you believe that coping with some of the people we deal with in emergency medicine is difficult or impossible, you’re not alone. We all feel this way from time to time. We all work in stressful environments where it may feel as though we have too little time for effective patient communication, patient centered care and patient satisfaction. You and your patients may often have mismatched views of what’s important. You may have a specific medical agenda and they might have a very different agenda. Then there’s the difficult patient – we all know who these people are – the hostile aggressive patient, the demanding patient, the know-it-all, the excessively anxious patient, and the incessant complainer, among others. If we don’t know how to handle these patients appropriately, they may receive suboptimal care, grind patient flow to a halt, and delay care of other patients. And of course, if the staff has to deal with a multitude of these patients on a given shift, there’s a sort of swarm-based escalation in frustration and sometimes, unfortunately, a total breakdown of effective care. These frustrations don’t only come out when we’re presented with multiple sequential difficult patients, but for some of us, the more we practice, the more we become desensitized to the needs of all of our patients and their families and, we run the risk of destroying the doctor-patient relationship, as well as making most of our patient interactions frustrating, unsatisfying, – even detrimental to our health and the outcomes of our patients. How you communicate in the ED can improve patient outcomes and enhance job satisfaction, yet there is little education on patient centered care for EM practitioners. After listening to this episode, it is my hope that what you learn from the literature and from expert opinion,and then apply to the way you communicate with your patients, will effectively make you a happier health care professional. Dr.Walter Himmel, Dr. Jean Pierre Champagne and RN Ann Shook guide us in this round table discussion on effective patient communication, patient centered care and patient satisfaction – this has evolved my practice into what I perceive as a higher level of personal satisfaction as well as patient care….I hope it will do the same for you.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is EMCases, episode 49 on patient communication.

0:10.4

Dr. Walter Himmel.

0:12.2

You can have great success and be somewhat dishonest, but over time it'll change your soul.

0:18.2

Dr. Jean-Pierre Champagne.

0:20.1

Achieving patient satisfaction is not fundamentally, necessarily, the goal of patient-centered care.

0:32.1

And nurse Ann Shook.

0:34.3

Working with patients and families and not doing two or for them.

0:39.8

If you have to eat a frog, eat the frog first thing in the morning and get it out of the way.

0:47.1

You know, I will pour out my heart and soul to someone.

0:59.9

Studies are only as good as the measuring tools they use.

1:05.8

So if you've actually given them a rudder, by which they can sort of gauge where they're going,

1:08.5

I think that is remarkably, remarkably important.

1:14.6

All great things can be abused.

1:22.6

Bringing you Canada's brightest minds in emergency medicine from EMC Studios in Toronto. If you believe that coping with some of the people we deal with in the emergency department is difficult or near impossible, you're not alone. We all feel this way from time to time. We work in stressful environments where it may feel as though we have too little time to

1:45.0

effectively communicate with our patients. You and your patients may have mismatched views of what's

1:50.1

important. You may have a specific medical agenda, and they might have a very different agenda.

1:56.0

There may be a disconnect in the perceived acuity of your patients presenting complaints.

2:00.8

Then there's the difficult patient. We all know who these people are.

2:04.7

The hostile aggressive patient, the demanding patient, the know-it-all, the excessively anxious

2:09.4

patient, and the incessant complainer among others.

2:13.2

If we don't know how to handle these patients appropriately, they may receive suboptimal care,

2:18.3

grind patient flow to a halt, and delay care of other patients.

...

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