“Research shows that courteous bedside manners are associated with improved patient recovery and satisfaction”

Recently an article in Becker’s Hospital Review http://www.beckershospitalreview.com reported that hospital interns generally failed to use “five key communications strategies, including introducing themselves, explaining their role in the patient’s care, touching the patient, asking open-ended questions such as “How are you feeling today?” and sitting down with the patient. The five actions are components of what is termed “etiquette-based medicine,” as described in a 2008 New England Journal of Medicine article by Michael W. Kahn, MD.”
“With internal medicine in particular, especially these days, it’s about chronic medical problems and chronic care, where much of what we need to do is motivate the patient to provide self-care and self-management to improve their health over the long term…You can’t do that if you’re not connecting with the patient very well.”
One physician is quoted: Dr. Feldman blames attending physicians for failing to be better role models in extending common courtesies to patients. “When I’m the attending physician I walk rounds with the whole team, introduce myself and put out my hand to shake the patient’s hand, and then make the intern who is going to present the case sit down with the patient in a chair next to the bed. I’m showing them how I think it should be done. And you know they go, ‘That’s how Dr. Feldman does it, so I should be doing it that way.'”
To read the full BHR article “Doctors, First Heal Thine Manners” by Chuck Lauer, highlight and click on open hyperlink http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/leadership-management/doctors-first-heal-thine-manners.html

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