Posts Tagged ‘Patient Dissatisfaction’

Denying Illness

Friday, August 7th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

At the Well blog, Tara Parker Pope links to a provocative piece by Dr. Pauline Chen on what happens when a diagnosis is missed.

Dr. Chen writes about a patient that had found a small mass on her breast.  Ignoring her doctor’s advice to start the process of properly diagnosing and treating it, she decided to try alternative therapies.  It wasn’t until the tumor had become “the size of a young child’s head” that the patient became worried enough to visit Dr. Chen and have surgery to remove it.

In her piece, Dr. Chen wonders about issues in our care delivery system that lead people to miss out on getting the right care.  But I think cases like Dr. Chen’s patient are of an entirely different kind.  They’re suffering not just from the effects of disease, but also another, more common problem, denial.

I remember my father, who is an internist, telling me stories like the one Dr. Chen tells.  These were people with obvious, visible effects of a disease, but who weren’t getting any care.  It wasn’t that they had no one paying attention to them – often they had family and friends almost begging them to go and get help.  They just refused to go.

It is a reaction that I think is common to anyone who has suffered from a serious illness.  You don’t want the bad thing to be happening, it’s much easier to deny its existence.  The thinking is: I don’t want to be sick.  If I need medical treatment, then that means I’m sick.  So I will not seek medical treatment.

It’s much worse if the family of the patient is in on it, too, enabling the denial.  And I’m sure it’s devastating to those family members who want to see their loved one get help, but can’t get them to listen.

It seems like it’s very hard for doctors, too.

Dr. Chen is right to point to ways in which our system can do better at reminding people of the importance of following up on their doctor’s recommendations.  But the problem she is talking about is much deeper and fundamental to the human psyche than any change in the process of delivering care may be able to ever address.

Doctors: Your Patients Are Talking About You

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

Attention doctors:

Your patients are talking about you.

They tell their friends, family and co-workers about you.  They talk about you in public places where people they don’t know might overhear them.  Probably every doctor understands this.  But for some reason, once all this talking starts happening on the internet, some doctors do odd things.  Like trying to get patients to sign “gag orders” before agreeing to treat them.

It’s a mistake, and a missed opportunity.

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My Reaction to “Putting Patients First”

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

A blogger at the event put it simply: As bad as it is being sick, there are many things in our system that make it worse.

All of the clinicians who spoke at the event understood this, and talked about ways to improve the doctor-patient relationship.

But the problem is worse than the clinicians may think, and it’s not something health care reformers are talking about.

Let me share some data with you so you can see what I mean.

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Mutual Assured Destruction: Not the Answer to Med Mal Crisis

Monday, June 8th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

Doctors have a right to be mad about medical malpractice claims against them.

Is there a creative solution to this mess in an old tenet of nuclear deterrence?  What if doctors aggressively went after patients who sued them, and pre-emptively warned them about even complaining on the internet about their experience?

On the surface it sounds attractive.  The doctor lets his patients know the rules of the game: I do my best, and you agree that if things don’t work out, you won’t turn on me.  But a closer look reveals how destructive it is.

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It’s Not the Government – Everyone’s At It

Monday, May 18th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

Writing about health care reform, Peggy Noonan complains of the decay of the English language:

A reporter asked a few clear and direct questions: What is President Obama’s health plan, how would it work, what would it look like?  I leaned forward.  Finally I would understand.  [Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen] Sebelius began to answer in that dead and deadening governmental language that does not reveal or clarify, but instead wraps legitimate queries in clouds of words and sends them our way.  I think I heard “accessing affordable quality health care,” “single payer plan vis-a-vis private multiparty insurers” and “key component of quality improvement.”  . . . . As she spoke, I attempted a sort of simultaneous translation.  . . . But I gave up.  Then a thought crossed my mind: Maybe we’re supposed to give up!  Maybe we’re supposed to be struck dumb, hypnotized by words and phrases that are aimed not at making things clearer but making them obscure and impenetrable.  Maybe we’re not supposed to understand.

Noonan is on to something, but it’s not what she thinks.  What she’s hearing is real-life language of our health care system from the people in charge of it.   And it’s not just government officials who talk this way — Sebelius’ language is just as common in the private sector.

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  • "Medicine is learned by the bedside and not in the class room. Let not your conception of manifestations of disease come from work heard in the lecture room or read from the book: see and then research, compare and control. But see first."
    - Sir William Osler, MD
    The Father of Modern Medicine
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