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Patient-Physician Relationship

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* Patient-Physician Relationship What is the ideal patient-physician relationship of the 21st century Why does it matter? And who should decide? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Patient-Physician Relationship


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Patient-Physician Relationship
  • What is the ideal patient-physician relationship
    of the 21st century
  • Why does it matter?
  • And who should decide?

3
Why Does It Matter
  • Because of the rapidly changing environment that
    characterizes health care today,
  • However, we need to understand what physicians
    and patients must do to protect and nurture that
    relationship.

4
An Increasingly Central Role for Patient
  • "Just as the molecular and chemistry-oriented
    sciences were adopted as the 20th-century medical
    paradigm, incorporation of the patient's
    perspective into a relationship- centered medical
    paradigm has been suggested as appropriate for
    the 21st century."

5
Why Does It Matter
  • The patient-physician relationship is fundamental
    to providing and receiving
  • excellent care
  • To the healing process
  • to improved outcomes
  • Therefore, it is important to understand what
    elements comprise the relationship and identify
    those that make it "good."

6
Patient-Center
  • One of the clearest themes to emerge is the
    centrality of patients.
  • Increasingly, they are not simply recipients of
    care or subjects of research but active, informed
    individuals who wish to know more about their
    condition and exert greater control over their
    own care

7
  • "nothing about me without me."

8
An Increasingly Central Role for Patient
  • A knowledgeable, beneficent and genuinely caring
    physician guiding the treatment of
  • respectful
  • trusting
  • grateful patients ,
  • However, the nature of the patient-physician
    relationship appears to be far more complex.
    Sweeping changes within and outside the health
    care sector

9
The Impact of Health Care Costs on the
Relationship
  • Such as the growing preponderance of
  • chronic illnesses,
  • new medical technologies,
  • shifting reimbursement practices,
  • the Internet, government regulations, rising
    costs and changing social norms
  • constantly molding patient and physician behavior.

10
The Impact of Health Care Costs on the
Relationship
  • Physicians feel overwhelmed by
  • Rising malpractice premiums,
  • The cost of new medical technology,
  • Constraints on reimbursement
  • upward pressures on nurses wages due to the
    national inflation.

11
The Impact of Health Care Costs on the
Relationship
  • Consumers face increasing costs, co-payments and
    coinsurance
  • The cost of prescription drugs is becoming
    unaffordable.
  • Payers ,the government, insurance companies,
  • Employers and private individuals believe that
    health care has become unwieldy and increasingly
    unaffordable.

12
The Physicians Obligation
  • Commits full attention to the patient
  • Creates an environment that preserves the
    patients dignity
  • Fosters candor in the disclosure of
    confidential and intimate information
  • Conveys genuine concern for the patients well
    being and
  • Respects the role of the patient advocate
    and/or caregiver.

13
The Physicians Obligation
  • Improved capacity for physicians to see
    patients as whole persons, rather than diseases
    or organ systems
  • Improved patient adherence to recommended
    therapies
  • Improved patient self-care
  • Increased patient satisfaction and more
    word-of-mouth referrals from happy,

14
foundation of mutual responsibilities
  • The intimacy of emotions and the private, often
    uncomfortable sharing of information
  • between patient and physician require a that
    include
  • Open and honest communication
  • Compassion
  • Trust and Respect

15
The Physicians Obligation
  • Improved patient recognition of important
    symptoms
  • More informed decisions by patients
  • Positive patient behavior changes
  • Patients taking a more active role in their
    care
  • A strong foundation to facilitate self-care
  • Improved clinical outcomes

16
The Patients Obligation
  • Prepare a list of questions and concerns they
    wish the physician to address
  • Make the physician aware of these questions and
    concerns at the beginning of the visit
  • Share their medical histories as completely and
    accurately as possible
  • .

17
Principal elements that are essential to the
relationship
  • 1-COMMUNICATION
  • 2-OFFICE EXPERIENCE
  • 3-HOSPITAL EXPERIENCE
  • 4-EDUCATION
  • 5-INTEGRATION
  • 6-DECISION-MAKING
  • 7-OUTCOMES

18
C o m m u n i c a t i o n
  • Exchange information
  • Reach mutually satisfying decisions
  • Develop a common understanding and
  • Build trust.

19
Drug of choice
  • Patient Education is the "drug of choice" for
    prevention and treatment of every medical
    condition.
  • The educational process is continuous and
  • requires regular assessment and/or update.

20
Education to change behavior
  • Education must occur in each element of the
    patient-physician relationship.
  • Its main goal is to achieving optimal health by
    "Behavior change"
  • includes both therapeutic lifestyle changes and
    adherence to treatment recommendations.

21
E d u c a t i o n
  • Patients and physicians must work as
  • partners to create an ever-evolving self-care
  • Program
  • Education should address physician/patient
    knowledge differences, culture and language Each
    patient should receive a tailored education
    package.
  • Physicians should be open to education ,

22
O f f i c e E x p e r i e n c e
  • Telephone communication between patients and
    office can be a very effective and efficient tool
  • Assuring flexible access is essential to a
    successful patient-physician relationship
  • Physicians should continually evaluate their
    scheduling systems for effectiveness

23
O f f i c e E x p e r i e n c e
  • Office visits should be used as opportunities to
    review care plans, including illnesses,
    pharmacologic therapies, potential drug-to-drug
    interactions and any new medications added by
    other physicians.
  • Patients and physicians should project mutual
    respect for each other by making every effort to
    be on time for appointments.

24
O f f i c e E x p e r i e n c e
  • A responsive, effective system for referrals and
    pre-authorizations is essential to an effective
    patient-physician relationship
  • Physicians should communicate to patients the
    value of regular, face-to-face medication reviews

25
H o s p i t a l E x p e r i e n c e
  • The health care team members should
  • attempt to personalize care in the hospital Which
    physician is in charge of care
  • Physicians role should be clearly defined to the
    patient
  • Effective communication is imperative to avoid
    errors

26
H o s p i t a l E x p e r i e n c e
  • Prior to procedures, an appropriate member of the
    hospital staff must educate patients about what
    to expect and answer their questions
  • Communication with family, as approved by the
    patient, should be coordinated by a designated
    family member or advocate

27
I n t e g r a t i o n
  • Patient-physician-developed strategies that offer
    opportunities for empowered patients to
  • take a more active role in choosing treatment
    options and developing desired outcomes.
  • Patient and physician recognition of the
    important medicinal value of a therapeutic
    rapport.

28
I n t e g r a t i o n
  • Physicians continually recommending health
    promoting lifestyle changes.
  • Patients working to understand the importance of
    managing their diseases and taking responsibility
    when their lifestyles negatively impact their
    diseases and health outcomes.

29
D e c i s i o n - M a k i n g
  • In the decision-making process,
  • Physicians should consider personal, religious,
    economic and psychosocial factors
  • Physicians are obliged to see that patients
  • receive sufficient information
  • Patients are obliged to educate themselves
    sufficiently to ask questions and participate in
    the decision goals regarding testing and
    treatment.

30
OUTCOMES
  • Physicians viewing patients as whole persons, not
    just as diseases or organ systems.
  • Likewise, patients viewing physicians as
    individuals who need
  • Trusting, honest and respectful relationships
    with their patients.

31
An effective patient-physician relationship
creates
  • The patient-physician relationship is the very
    heart of health care delivery.
  • At its best, the physician-patient relationship
    not only gives patients access to health care but
    also can promote healing.
  • In the scientific realm, mounting evidence
    demonstrates that the effectiveness of the
    patient-physician relationship directly relates
    to health outcomes.

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An effective patient-physician relationship
creates
  • This healing relationship often includes friends
    and family members, patient advocates and other
    health care professionals.
  • The relationship works best when physicians
    acknowledge the roles of these individuals and
    fully integrate them into the care of the patient.
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