Title: Doctor-Patient Relationship and Medical Professionalism
1Doctor-Patient Relationship and Medical
Professionalism
- Holly J. Humphrey, MD
- Dean for Medical Education
- The University of Chicago Pritzker School of
Medicine
2Framing the Issue
- The Physician Charter
- Principles include
- Primacy of patient welfare
- Patient autonomy
- Commitments include
- Honesty with patients
- Patient confidentiality
- Maintaining appropriate relationships with
patients
ABIMF, ACP, EFIM 2001
3ACGME Competencies
- Patient Care
- Medical Knowledge
- Practice-Based Learning and Improvement
- Interpersonal and Communication Skills
- Professionalism
- Systems-Based Practice
ACGME Outcome Project, 1999
4Framing the Issue
- Seven Essential Elements in Physician-Patient
Communication - Build the doctor-patient relationship
- Open the discussion
- Gather information
- Understand the patients perspective
- Share information
- Reach agreement on problems and plans
- Provide closure
Bayer-Fetzer Conference on Physician-Patient
Communication in Medical Education, 1999
5Etiquette Based Medicine
- Checklist for first meeting with a hospitalized
- patient
- Ask permission to enter the room wait for an
answer - Introduce yourself, showing ID badge
- Shake hands (wear gloves if needed)
- Sit down. Smile if appropriate
- Briefly explain your role on the team
- Ask the patient how he/she is feeling about being
in the hospital
Kahn MW, N Eng J Med, 2008
6Doctor-Patient Relationship Linked to Outcomes of
Care
- Sustained physician-patient partnerships with
bonds of trust and knowledge of patients were
correlates of three outcomes of care - Adherence
- Satisfaction
- Improved health status
Safran DG et al, J of Fam Practice, 1998
7Example
- The University of Chicago FACE Card Program
8The University of Chicago FACE Card Program
- BACKGROUND
- Patients admitted to academic teaching hospitals
are often cared for by teams made up of multiple
physicians at varying levels of training.
Potential for confusion, possible
misrepresentation.1.2 - Patients are in a unique position to evaluate the
professional behavior of their inpatient
physicians.
- OBJECTIVES
- To help patients identify and evaluate their
inpatient physicians. - To collect patient evaluations of the
professional behaviors of their inpatient
physicians.
9Description FACE CardsSide 1
10Description FACE CardsSide 2
11FACE Card Procedure
-
- During attending rounds for new patients, the
team members place their card in the
corresponding spot in the plastic card holder. - Team members give card holder to the patient and
explain the project to the patient, asking him or
her to rate the physicians.
12FACE Card Procedure
- FACE envelopes used for the collection of FACE
cards are placed in patients charts in front of
discharge papers by unit secretaries. - Reports for physicians are generated from
completed evaluations. - Reports go into a portfolio for viewing by
trainee during structured quarterly feedback
session with PD or chief.
13Sample Comments
- This doctor made such an impression on me that
Im now going to switch her for my primary
doctor. She was everything a successful, caring
doctor should be. I feel like I just found the
most perfect doctor. - Excellent young doctor. Very caring and sweet!
- While I believe this doctor cared for me
excellently most of the time I felt I was in the
dark about what was happening. I never had a
chance to ask questions until the end mostly
because everyone was always in such a hurry to
get away.
14AAMC Survey Curricular Content
1980 2000
Communication 47 80
Geriatrics 82 95
Death/Dying 96
Cultural Competence 70
AAMC Medical Educations Quiet Revolution
15- I want the doctors of tomorrow to know that
when all the formal teaching is over and I walk
into your office my need is for medical care for
my child, but my desperate hope is that you have
the same stake in my childs health as I do. - J. Schlucter
- Mother of 2
- Both children with cystic fibrosis