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Patient Provider Relationship

Patient Provider Relationship . HINF 371 - Medical Methodologies Session 19. Objective . To review the requirements of effective patient provider relationship To discuss how technology can contribute to enable this effective relationship . Reference.

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Patient Provider Relationship

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  1. Patient Provider Relationship HINF 371 - Medical Methodologies Session 19

  2. Objective • To review the requirements of effective patient provider relationship • To discuss how technology can contribute to enable this effective relationship

  3. Reference • American Healthways and John’s Hopkins (2003) Defining the Patient-Physician Relationship for the 21st Century. www.healthways.com/articles/ outcomes/PatientPhysician.pdf

  4. Principal Elements of Relationship • Communication • Office Experience • Hospital Experience • Education • Integration • Decision-making • Outcomes

  5. Does This sound Familiar? It has been way too long since you’ve been in to see me. Do you have any idea how hard it is to get an appointment? I understand that it can be, but it is very important that you come in regularly OK, but can you guarantee that we will have more time to really discuss what is going on with me? We’ll set a longer appointment time. Are you taking your medications as prescribed? Uh…not really. I hate pills! Exercising regularly? Uh…no.

  6. Symptoms of the Disease… • Fewer providers + managed care = less access for patients • Greater life expectancy + life “excesses” = more patients with chronic disease = more encounter time required • Healthcare consumerism + technology = information overload = BREAKDOWN OF THE PATIENT-PHYSICIAN RELATIONSHIP Don Caruso, MD – Associate Medical Director Mike House – Chief Information Officer, Cheshire Medical Centre)

  7. Communication • All parties should acknowledge patients as most knowledgeable about their symptoms • Patients should provide feedback and Physicians should welcome feedback • Physicians should implement a social questionnaire as part of their initial intake • Role of patients’ gender, age, race and religion must be recognized • Traumatic news must be delivered appropriately

  8. Communication • Patient’s designated advocate must be respected and included in care relationship • Physicians provide current, scientifically based “best medical practices” in an ethical and timely fasion • Patients should seek – physicians should promote – active, collaborative discussions with patients • Relationship must mirror our daily lives by relying on methods of communication that are not limited to inflexible, one-on-one visits

  9. Office Experience • Patients should be able to access healthcare in a timely fashion (assuring flexible access is also essential) • Details of office practices and procedures should be available in written form • Physicians and their staff should review medical information form periodically to help minimize duplication of information and the consequent burden on patients • Physicians office staff should be polite, professionals and well-trained to facilitate the care experience • Telephone communication between patients and office should be designed to be effective and efficient and avoid frustration and overload

  10. Office Experience • Physicians should continually evaluate their scheduling systems for effectiveness • Office visits should be used as opportunities to review care plans • Both patients and physicians make effort to be on time for appointments • Both patients and physicians enter appointment prepared. • There should be sufficient redundancy to absorb unexpected events

  11. Office Experience • A responsive and effective system for referrals is essential • Physicians should communicate to patients the value of regular, face-to-face medication reviews

  12. Hospital Experience • Healthcare team should attempt to personalize care in the hospital • Which physician in charge of care – and that physician’s role – should be clearly defined to the patient • Effective communication is imperative to avoid errors • Prior to procedures, patients must be effectively educated • Communication with the family, as approved by the patient, should be coordinated by a designated family member or advocate

  13. Hospital Experience • Physicians should ensure comprehensive discharge planning • Patients should make sure that their discharge information or inpatient records available at outpatient setting • Caring and attentive emergency room staff and timely evaluations are vital • ER staff should communicate to the patient’s responsible physician all arrangements for follow-up care and details of the particular visit • A strong patient-physician relationship should ensure that the emergency room is used for “true emergencies”

  14. Education • Physicians and patients 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 by patient • Physicians should discuss with patients the risks associated with prescribed treatment

  15. Education • Physicians should furnish patients with educational materials or resources • Physicians should familiarize themselves with and incorporate guidelines into treatment plan • Patients should incoporate guidelines into their self-care programs • Patients should share with physicians any outside information with providers involving changes to the prescribed treatment program • Physicians should remain objective when reviewing outside information

  16. Integration • Physicians or their staff should facilitate patients’ movement through the system in a prompt and efficient manner • Patients who schedule their own appointments should recognize their responsibility to inform primary physician • Physicians, with patients’ consent, provide information promptly to other care providers • Both patients and physicians recognize that EMR is the optimal method for having shareable medical information • Patients should share their own personal medical information with care providers

  17. Integration • If EMR is not available, patients should have a copy of their all test results • Physicians must remain abreast of specific formularies and coverage of medications

  18. Decision-Making • In decision making process, physicians should consider patients’ personal, religious, economic and psychosocial factors, as well as clinical • Physicians are obliged to see that patients receive sufficient information and patients are obliged to educate themselves to be able to ask questions and understand the consequences of the decision • Physicians and patients should explicitly define and discuss realistic expectations • Patients have right know all of their options regardless of physician’s beliefs, values and interests • Patients have the responsibility to fully disclose their adherence to recommendations

  19. Decision-Making • Role of advocates must be identified • Patients should write down their preferences of care

  20. Outcomes • Clinical or disease specific: patients and physicians should understand and discuss clinical practice outcomes • Patient-centred outcomes: Physicians should appreciate patient-centred outcomes as valid objectives • Physician-centred outcomes must be objectively defined and advocated in the health system • Self efficacy of patients is a common outcome.

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