On Shared Advocacy

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NaBloPoMo 2016, Letters to Patients, Day 14

To Patients Concerned About the Future of Healthcare:

We need one another now more than ever.

In April last year I started this blog to help patients and physicians connect in an increasingly disconnected healthcare system.  Both patients and physicians feel bound and invaded from multiple directions, all interfering with the doctor-patient relationship.  We all suffer for it.

It occurs to me that many of you may not know exactly what we physicians struggle with, that makes some of us so grumpy every day.

What assumptions do you make about us, and how does that impact our interactions?

Here are just a few of our challenges:

Electronic Health Record.  You’d think this would make everything faster, easier.  It has not.  It’s not only your chart.  It’s your billing record.  It’s the demographic, biometric, diagnosis, treatment, and outcome data repository.  And it’s clumsy, to say the least, at all of its functions.  Read more about how it negatively impacts physicians’ quality of life and care here.

Quality Measures.  We all want you to have the best quality care possible.  But how do we measure that?  Many payers base it on outcomes.  Physicians are judged and compensated, for instance, based on their patients’ blood pressure, blood sugar, and whether or not they have quit smoking.  But I cannot control these things.  I cannot make you take your medication or stop eating sugar.  I cannot make you stop smoking.  What I need is to talk to you about your life, so we can figure out the solutions.

Quantity pressure.  But talking requires time—quality time.  The 15 minute clinic slot is designed to maximize volume, not quality (how ironic?).  If you have an acute problem, on top of your uncontrolled blood pressure and diabetes, and we also have to set up your mammogram and colonoscopy, how can I possibly have time to explore, let alone address, the nuances of your health behaviors?

Some of my colleagues advocate for policy change at state and federal levels.  When I suggest that we consider bringing patients on board to help advocate for/with us, some eschew the idea.  We advocate for our patients, not the other way around, they say.  It’s as if we will be seen as weak that we bring you along to speak on our behalf.

The way I see it, we should all stand and speak up for one another.  Yes, in our working relationship I have more power and authority in many ways, and it’s my job to take care of you.  But we are all participants in the larger system, and I think we can make greater, faster change for the better if we all fully understand our shared interests and goals, and advocate for them side by side.

What else do you need to know?

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*For your information, here is an excellent article describing the movement toward integrating physician health into healthcare policy for the benefit of all.

 

 

On Lifelong Learning

dsc_0522NaBloPoMo 2016, Letters to Patients, Day 13

To My Patients Who Continue to Teach Me:

I’m a better doctor, a better parent, and a better person for knowing you.  Thank you.

To the middle-aged father of five who told me about my tween son, “Just be present.  Wait for it.  He won’t use many words.  When he starts talking, put down whatever you’re doing and listen.”

To the gifted daycare director and mom of two who advised me to ‘come alongside’ the kids rather than ‘coming at’ them.

To the auntie who reassured me that all will be well if I can hang on and ride the tides of marriage.

To the psychologist who taught me mindfulness in the exam room.

To the creative who showed me that left- and right-brainers overlap more than I realized.

To every patient who loves, hates, adores, vexes, uplifts, frustrates, admires and dismisses me, you each teach me a unique and valuable lesson.

Medicine is not about knowing.  It’s about listening, watching, being, waiting, doing, and holding.

Thank you all for the privilege to learn.

May I serve you well in return.

 

 

An Interjection

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Hello friend readers!  Want to share this from my morning Facebook feed… A video about Donald Trump that made me think.

Forgive me, I have not yet learned how to embed video into posts; here is the link.

And my thoughts:

Wow, this really paints a different picture–positively stymies me. As I watched, I remembered all the other things I have seen and heard him say–so inconsistent–mind-bogglingly so–with what’s presented here. So we will have to wait and see. And do everything we can as individuals to hold his feet (and those of all of our elected officials) to the fire.

I am extremely skeptical about his character (so extremely). But if this video truly represents it (OMG so skeptical), and he can manifest it in the next four years (***starting by calling to his supporters to stop committing assault and battery in his name***), that would be the best case scenario.

I will pray for his better angels to prevail. I know many of us believe he has none. But if we write him off forever now and oppose him for its own sake, we risk throwing away a unique opportunity to learn and connect.

In the end I would rather have given him the benefit of the doubt and been disappointed than thrown him away and wish I had been more generous.

Because I want to live generously. It’s better for my health and happiness, and I think it’s the better example for my kids. I can do that and be skeptical and pragmatic at the same time.

God help us all.