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Latest Doctors & Nurses Articles
A physician who doesn't continuously monitor the interaction or doesn't check in with the patient may cover areas of little interest to the patient and miss significant issues.
Making the best use of your appointment time.
This press release is an announcement submitted by UW Medicine/UW Health Sciences News & Community Relation, and was not written by Diabetes Health.
Editor’s Note: Although the following article is directed toward healthcare professionals, we think the rest of us (patients) can “reverse engineer” some good tips on how to handle the oh-so-brief time we get to spend with our doctors.
With their waiting rooms crowded and exam rooms full, many physicians say they are too busy to be good communicators. Those who study physician time-management, however, think otherwise. Certain communication skills can foster efficiency and effectiveness during an office visit without sacrificing rapport with patients, according to researchers at the University of Washington (UW) and the University of Rochester.
Their guide to a smoother flow of communication between doctors and patients appears in the July 14 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine. Their model is based on the authors' observation: "Effective communication in primary care must include skills that enhance the quality of care while helping patients and physicians use time wisely… Making the best use of available time is important for visits of any duration."
A few of the lessons the researchers presented in the resulting article, "Relationship, Communication, and Efficiency in the Medical Encounter: Creating a Clinical Model from a Literature Review" are:
Throughout the office visit, it's helpful for physicians to:
"Visits with the doctor that contain these fundamental elements," said Larry Mauksch, a UW behavioral scientist in family medicine who studies and teaches doctor/patient communications, "lead to greater patient satisfaction, better adherence to medical regimes, increased self-management, better health outcomes, lower costs, and fewer malpractice claims. These skills enable physicians to do it right the first time, so they don't have to do it over."
"We've tried to propose a model of doctor/patient communications," Dugdale added, "that is at the intersection between what patients need and the reality of a doctor's world. These are skills that make a difference and that doctors can use throughout their entire careers."
Some Facts on Doctors' Office Visits:
Teaching Doctors-in-Training
Patient communications are addressed in medical schools and residency training programs, but after starting practice, many new doctors abandon what they learned.
Mauksch said it's difficult for medical students to learn doctor/patient communications only through classroom lectures or reading. Medical student training at the University of Washington (UW) includes observations of actual, enacted, and Web-taped doctor visits.
Trainees use checklists to monitor specific parts of a medical encounter, and they learn to put a name to specific skills. Students rate video demonstrations that are missing core communication elements and identify strategies for improvement. They also observe one another to help each other learn. Communication skill building is a key component of the UW medical school's introduction to clinical medicine course for second-year medical students and the family medicine clerkship for third-year medical students.
Some senior medical students take a clinical clerkship that concentrates on patient-centered communication. Mauksch likens the method he uses to the training of an athlete or a musician, where students have many opportunities to try out their skills, get comments, and try again, with refinements.
"Students experience for themselves how specific communications skills help them avoid pitfalls in patient interactions and make better use of time," Mauksch said. "They see themselves becoming more effective and enjoy their work more."
The researchers involved in the article presented were: Larry Mauksch, a UW behavioral scientist in family medicine who studies and teaches doctor/patient communications; David C. Dugdale, an internal medicine physician and director of the UW Hall Health Primary Care Center; Sherry Dodson, UW clinical medical librarian; and Ronald Epstein, professor of family medicine, psychiatry, and oncology at the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry and its Center to Improve Communication and Health Care.
Source: UW Medicine/UW Health Sciences News & Community Relations
Categories: Doctors & Nurses, Type 1 Issues, Type 2 Issues
Aug 5, 2008 -
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