Engaging Physicians and Patients in Patient-Centered Care

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Resident Educator Development
Advertisements

Beverly Begovich RN, MBA Pat Turbiville February 7 , 2013
The Patient-centered Medical Home: Care Coordination Ed Wagner, MD, MPH, MACP MacColl Institute for Healthcare Innovation Group Health Research Institute.
Patient Engagement: Begins with Patient- and Family- Centered Care Bernard Roberson, MSM, BA, HSC Administrative Director Patient and Family Centered Care.
COMMUNICATING BAD NEWS: PATIENT AND FAMILY MEETINGS.
COMFORT* Communication (narrative) Orientation and opportunity Mindful presence Family Openings Relating Team * Wittenberg-Lyles, E., Goldsmith, J., Ferrell,
Feedback in Clinical Skills Session in Pre-clinical Years Dr. Steve Martin Island Medical Program.
The Challenge and Importance of Evaluating Residents and Fellows Debra Weinstein, M.D. PHS GME Coordinators Retreat March 25, 2011.
Insert hospital logo here Communicating to Improve Quality Training
Introduction to Drug Information Services Ch.#1. An introductory course to teach the students basic principles of DI retrieval. Designed to help students.
MGH Back Bay Patient-Centeredness We are working on becoming certified as a Level 3 (the highest) Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) by the National.
Ask Me Anything American Nurses Training Association.
GPAQ Survey Results & Summary Analysis for: Marple Cottage Surgery Individual Questions Analysis and Year On Year Comparison (2007/2008 – 2008/2009)
Culturally Competent Care from the Perspective of the Consumer: What Matters Most October, 2007.
Joan E. St. Onge, M.D. UMMSM At Holy Cross Hospital Internal Medicine Residency Faculty Development January 23, 2013 The Evaluation Toolkit.
Effective Use of Interpreters Adopted from St. Mary’s Interpreter Services References: The Medical Interview Across Cultures, Debra Buchwald, MD: Patient.
©2003 Community Faculty Development Center Teaching Culture and Community in Primary Care: Teaching Culturally Appropriate Communication Skills.
Patient Experience: Why does it matter?
Module #3 END-OF-LIFE CARE: Module 3 Communicating with Patients and Families.
Assessment of Communication Skills in Medical Education
1 Measuring Patients’ Experience of Hospital Care Angela Coulter Picker Institute Europe
Medicare Patients Rights and Better Care Transitions Michael Burgess New York StateWide Senior Action Council, September 13, 2012.
ACGME OUTCOME PROJECT : THE PROGRAM COORDINATOR’S ROLE Jim Kerwin, MD University of Arizona.
Crofton & Sharlston Medical Practice Questionnaire Results 2013/14 Presentation of 2013/14 Patient Questionnaire Results Patient Participation Group Wednesday.
Continuity Clinics as Medical Home Hawaii Dyson Initiative Louise Iwaishi, MD March 5, 2005 Hawaii Dyson Initiative.
TNEEL-NE. Slide 2 Connections: Communication TNEEL-NE Health Care Training Traditional Training –Health care training stresses diagnosis and treatment.
Teaching Residents to... Teach Peter DeBlieux,MD LSUHSC Clinical Professor of Medicine LSUIH Emergency Department Director Emergency Medicine Director.
DR. KAMRAN SATTAR MBBS FAcadMEd AoME (UK) DipMedEd UoD (UK)
Morning Briefings and Huddles
Simplifying the road to a healthy workplace CORPORATE TELEHEALTH.
Cultural Competence Culture is the widening of the mind and of the spirit --- Jawaharlal Nehru © 2002 Sayantani DasGupta.
1 How to Talk To Your Doctor Marj Bernstein & Cathie Duncan Bridges Program.
To Call Or Not To Call... That Is The Question Communicating With Physicians About Medications Daniel L. DePietropaolo, MD National Medical Director Compassionate.
Nursing Excellence Conference April 19,2013
Reducing Avoidable Readmissions A Cross-Continuum Approach.
BASIC PRINCIPLES OF PALLIATIVE CARE A. Reed Thompson, MD Donald W. Reynolds Department of Geriatrics University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.
DR. KAMRAN SATTAR MBBS FAcadMEd AoME (UK) DipMedEd UoD (UK)
1 The Patient Perspective: Satisfaction Survey Presented at: Disease Management Colloquium June 22, 2005 Shulamit Bernard, RN, PhD.
Asthma Patients and the Patient-Practitioner Relationship: A Qualitative Study of Continuity of Care Margaret M. Love, PhD Family Practice and Community.
CONSULTATION SKILLS Dr. Ekram A Jalali.
Assessment of Emergency Medicine Residents’ Bedside Communication Skills: A Survey of Emergency Department Patients Amanda Keller York College of PA Biology.
What is “Competency” in the New Millennium? Shirley Schlessinger, MD, FACP Associate Dean for Graduate Medical Education University of Mississippi Medical.
Doctor Patient Relationship Prepared by Dr Sirwan K Ali Doctor Patient Relationship Prepared by Dr Sirwan K Ali
A hidden curriculum? Possible to teach?. In the literature, a physician: Subordinates her/her own interest to those of others Adheres to high ethical.
Mental health professionals and related agencies provide treatment and support for people with mental health problems.
Orientation to Business Administration Jeff Steele, LDO, ABOC, CPOT.
Medical System – How to Get What You Need Nancy Lane, MN, CS, BC, NP Senior Health Dimensions.
PROFESSIONALISM WORKSHOP. What is Professionalism? What does Professionalism mean for doctors and others working in healthcare? The group will think of.
Improving Medical Education Skills. Many Family Medicine graduates teach… D6 students New doctors who do not have post-graduate training Other healthcare.
Inputs Outputs Outcomes ActivitiesParticipantsShort TermIntermediateLong Term Georgia Hospital Association Disseminate information on best practices in.
Doctor-Patient Relationship and Medical Professionalism
Educational Outcomes Service Group: Overview of Year One Lynne Tomasa, PhD May 15, 2003.
History & Clinical Interviewing Dr Vivek Joshi, MD.
Medical Professionalism: Treating Colleagues with Respect J Rush Pierce Jr, MD, MPH Bronwyn Wilson, MD Hospitalists Best Practices February 18, 2011.
Readmissions Driver Diagram OHA HEN 2.0. Readmissions AIMPrimary Drivers Secondary DriversChange Ideas Reduce Readmissions Identify patients at high-risk.
ENHANCING THE PATIENT EXPERIENCE THROUGH VOLUNTEER SERVICES Presented By: Jennifer Thayer, SPHR, SHRM-SCP.
Chapter Three Patient and Family Education Chapter 3-1 Fourth Edition Linda D. Urden Kathleen M. Stacy Mary E. Lough Priorities in C RITICAL C ARE N URSING.
A Longitudinal Curriculum in Motivational Interviewing WT-04 Clara Keegan, MD University of Vermont Medical Center.
Teach-back Method for Patient Education Tracy Grant Viterbo University.
Exploring Non-Physician Roles in Competency-Based Resident Education April 1, 2016 Nicole McGuire, Education Coordinator, Union Hospital FMR (Terre Haute,
The One-Minute Learner: An Tool to Promote Student-Faculty Discussion of Goals and Expectations Molly Cohen-Osher, MD; Miriam Hoffman-Kleiner, MD BUSM.
CALVERLEY PATIENT SURVEY FEEDBACK NOVEMBER ACCESSING YOUR APPOINTMENT Very quick and professional – One could say “Bedside Manner Excellent” On.
Clinical Quality Improvement: Achieving BP Control
Interpersonal and Communication Skills
Masters in Medical Education in Clinical Contexts
Prescribing.
The Concept of Communication Skills in Medicine
A Correlation Between The Therapeutic Nursing Approach and Quality Patient Outcomes: An Integrative Literature Review Isabel Galang, MS, DePaul University.
Communication Skills Interviewing and assessment By Dr. Vian Ahmed
Presentation transcript:

Engaging Physicians and Patients in Patient-Centered Care Dorothea Wild, MD, MPH, Dr. med. Griffin Hospital Image: MD and pt shaking hands

Overview Explore barriers to physician engagement in patient-centered care Evidence supporting effective patient-centered communication Discuss strategies to engage physicians at all levels in patient-centered care: Motivate Activate Monitor Why is “weigh yourself every day” so hard? Engaging patients in managing their disease

Why is it so hard to bring the MDs around? “I have many patients who would like nothing more than to spend 2-3 hours with me to go over every news report they have heard about a rare disease. I have patients who would like me to mediate the problems between their daughter and son-in-law, and those that just want to discuss politics and religion with me.” “Why should a patient bother to consult a physician if the patient does not want professional care? (…) It is important to distinguish between a poor bedside manner and the expertise that develops from many years of training and experience. (…) Dr. Berwick is totally out of touch with clinical medicine and one wonders if he has ever been in medical practice.” New York Times responses to Don Berwick article about patient-centered care Somebody tearing their hair out, or running against wall, or setting off bombs

Physician Barriers… The Problem Perceived contradiction between evidence based care versus patient centeredness Time constraints Fear that engaging patients would lead to overwhelming demands on time Lack of knowledge and skills No incentives for communication/coordination Impression that Institution/Medical staff does not value communication Barriers

How to Motivate Physicians Make it important Make it evidence-based Make it about their patients Activate: Show them where they are Give them actionable things to do Monitor: Monitor the data Give regular feedback

Good News: Communication Improves Outcomes Good physician communication: Increases patient adherence Increases satisfaction Decreases anxiety Leads to more accurate recall Improves management Decreases inappropriate utilization of resources Decreases litigation Bartlett et al. J Chron Dis 1984;37:755-764; Stewart 2002

Patient-Centered Communication is More Scientific “History-taking, the most clinically sophisticated procedure of medicine, is an extraordinary investigative technique: in few other forms of scientific research does the observed object talk.” Alvan Feinstein, Clinical Judgement 1967 “A successful dialogue between patient and physician is at the heart of working scientifically with patients.” George L. Engel, 1995 Image: scientist with microscope/beakers Used with permission from Auguste Fortin III

It’s hard to be a patient… Patients’ recall of their discharge info: 27.9% were able to list all their meds 37.2% were able to recount the purpose of all their meds 14.0% were able to state side effects 41.9% were able to state their diagnosis Makaryus & Friedman Mayo Clin Proc 2005;80(8):991-994

Motivate: Speak With the Voice of the Patient Survey Patients while hospitalized, there is technology available to help (www.howsyourcare.org) Patient call backs 48 hours after discharge Focus groups Call fall-outs on HCHAPS scores to elicit more data Image: Patient

Patient Call Backs How are you feeling since the discharge? Are there any new or worsening symptoms? Did you understand what you were treated for? Did you get all your medication filled? Do you have concerns or questions about your medication? Do you know the doctor who was in charge of your care? Did you get a follow-up appointment scheduled? Image: Somebody on phone

HCAHPS Call-Backs When you were asked “how often did your doctors explain things well, you said usually. What would it have taken for you to say always?” Answer: “I was actually thinking about Dr. X, when I answered those questions. He seemed so aloof and very cold. He did a colonoscopy on me and when I woke up, he quickly told me I had a mass and went away. He did not stay back to explain to me what it means and what would be the next steps.” Same Image: Somebody on phone

Activate: Show the Data Analyze HCAHPs MD scores: Attending Nursing unit HCAHPs question BUT: Patients aren’t the only ones who observe MD communication! Survey house staff/midlevel providers regarding attending teaching behavior and hidden curriculum Survey nurses regarding physician behavior Image: Data, lines going one way or the other

Survey Items from hidden Curriculum Survey How often do faculty/residents/interns: Encourage patients’ participation in their care Take seriously patients’ concerns Develop good rapport with patients Explore emotional aspects of patients’ illnesses Communicate interest in the patient as a person Adapted from: Beckman, : Haidet P, Kelly PA, Chou C, et al. Characterizing the patient-centeredness of the hidden curriculum. Acad Med 2005;80:44-50 Image: Docs talking to patients

Survey Items from Nursing Survey How often does this provider (resident/faculty): Communicate concern in patients as unique persons Encourage patients’ participation in their own care Explore emotional aspects of patients’ illness Provide patients with a clear understanding of their plan of care Handle demanding interpersonal situations in a respectful and effective manner Listen to you and considers what you have to say about patients’ care and concerns Respond in a timely manner when notified Image: Nurse talking to doc Adapted from: Wooliscroft et al. Acad Med 1994;69:216-224

Ask for concrete things to do: “Say: What Else?” Physician Centered: MD: What brings you here today? Pt: I have headaches. MD: Where are the headaches? How long do they last? What do you do to relieve them? Patient Centered: MD: What brings you here today? Pt: I have headaches. MD: What else? Pt: Well, I have trouble sleeping Pt: I am very worried about my son. He is using drugs. Image: Pt and doc Barrier et al. Mayo Clin Proc 2003;78:211-214

OSCE (Objective Structured Clinical Exam): Tool to provide feedback Resident script: It is morning and you are about to visit a patient in her room. (…) you received sign-out that this patient is coming in for pancreatitis, possibly alcoholic. Your goal for the next 6 minutes is: establish a therapeutic relationship and assess her understanding of her admission diagnosis. Patient script: You are upset because you think that people are accusing you of being an alcoholic. You are convinced that your pain is from eating bad food. Taped and viewed with chief hospitalist/external expert Image: Doc with patient

During Rounds Model patient-centered behavior Discuss evidence for patient-centered care during rounds Instill the habit to end each encounter with “can you explain the plan for the day?” Use the teach back method “So, Mrs. X. What do you understand about what brought you in here?” Image: Group of docs around patient

Monitor: Track Data Track patient-centeredness as performance metric in resident and hospitalist files Track HCHAPs score, How’s Your Care scores for groups and individual physicians Periodically repeat hidden curriculum, nurses survey for improvement Image: More tracking data

Monitor: Provide Feedback Provide direct observation Provide patient comments Provide concrete behaviors to implement Example: Sit down, ask a question, smile, and listen for 2 minutes without interrupting Example: Patient said “all my friends smoke” – how could you respond in an empathetic way? 2 docs sitting down and talking

Why is “weigh yourself every day” so hard ?

Barriers to self-management Multiple barriers to patient adherence Financial and practical Motivational Cultural competency and health literacy Health beliefs, external locus of control Relationship with provider crucial to identifying and overcoming those barriers Tools to activate patients and communicate in culturally and linguistically appropriate manner Consistent monitoring and coaching Image: Barriers

Expanding the partnership outside the hospital Accountable care will require hospitals, SNF’s, VNA’s, and PCP’s to engage patients Building partnerships across continuum of care Putting patients and care partners at the center of care transitions Holding each other accountable Extending hands beyond hospital, team-based care