1 / 16

Returning to Health: The Necessity of Certainty

Returning to Health: The Necessity of Certainty. Lee S. Glass, MD Peter Rothfels, MD. Declarations. Lee S. Glass, MD - Conflicts of Interest: None - Biases: Many Peter Rothfels, MD - No financial or other conflicts of interest - Biases: Many more. Course Outline. Introduction

kaia
Télécharger la présentation

Returning to Health: The Necessity of Certainty

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Returning to Health: The Necessity of Certainty Lee S. Glass, MD Peter Rothfels, MD

  2. Declarations • Lee S. Glass, MD - Conflicts of Interest: None - Biases: Many • Peter Rothfels, MD - No financial or other conflicts of interest - Biases: Many more

  3. Course Outline • Introduction • View Daniel Gilbert, PhD: TED Talk: The Synthesis of Happiness • Didactic: Achieving successful health care outcomes • Conversation regarding the above

  4. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4q1dgn_C0AU

  5. Key Practice Points • Must have a treatment plan • Treatment plan needs to be collaborative/ bidirectional 3. Treatment plan is a final and binding agreement upon approach to recovery

  6. Treatment Plan • sets expectations, including imaging type and number, consultations, treatment programs, (pain) medication expectations, limits, etc. • documents the care you are about to provide • becomes the basis for measuring ongoing progress, or the lack thereof • facilitates reimbursement of the services you provide • if a dispute arises, it is your most powerful evidence with the patient or licensing authority

  7. Treatment Plan Must Be Developed Collaboratively • It memorializes the foundation of the doctor-patient relationship • Helps patients understand from the beginning progress, outcome expectations, and what is/is not going to be done, i.e.: number of MRI’s, opioid meds/dosage, etc. • It imposes bidirectional responsibilities • you, the physician to provide care • the patient to actively participate in the recovery process

  8. Patient’s Buy-In • A patient’s buy-in to a treatment plan cannot be imposed, it must be given/agreed upon by the patient • Especially when times get tough, the patient must be able to realize that this was something to which he/she had agreed

  9. Treatment Plan is Final and Binding • It was a mutual/bidirectional agreement on the path to recovery • Cannot make exceptions, absent intervening surgery or other non-related medical event

  10. Successful Health Care Outcomes • Health care success is facilitated by planning that sets bidirectional expectations • Physician’s commitments: agreed-upon workup, treatment, meds, etc. • Patient commitment: daily activity log; active participation in PT, OT, etc. • Joint commitment: After agreed-upon workup, when treatment fails to produce clinically meaningful improvement in function, further treatment (especially pain treatment) is ended.

  11. Successful Health Care Outcomes • Health care success is facilitated by collaborative planning: • Honest discussion regarding likelihood of achieving patient’s sought-after health status • Discussion conducted collaboratively • Principal focal points: workup, treatment, moving on • Need for agreed-upon certainty

  12. Successful Health Care Outcomes • Health care success is assisted by reinforcement of plan elements at subsequent visits

  13. Treatment Plan • Clarity of the outline of the plan • Clarity of Expectations – you as the physician to provide care and support, the patient to be actively engaged in the recovery process • Reinforces to the patient that success is achievable, but only by adhering to this structure

  14. “Fortune always leaves one door open in disasters to admit a remedy.” Don Quixote de La Mancha Miguel de Cervantes “They are able because they believe they are able.” Marcus Aurelius ~ Roman Emperor

  15. Discussion • Comments or concerns?

More Related