Term
What a Patient Brings to the Doctor:
Cultural beliefs
Personality
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Definition
1. Personal beliefs
2. Transference
3. Defense Mechanisms
4. Stoicism
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Term
The Patient’s PERSONAL STORY
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Definition
Routinely check these areas of personal concern if appropriate
1.Fear of death, mutilation and disability
2.Dislike, distrust and disbelief in the medical system
3.Concern about loss of function, wholeness, role, status and independence
4.Denial of problems
5.Separation, grief, and losses of many varieties
6.Leaving home and becoming independent
7.Retirement
8.Marital problems
9.Job problems
10.Administrative issues relating to the patient’s disease or disability.
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Term
Personal Beliefs
(Core Beliefs*) |
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Definition
1. World: Safe vs. Unsafe
2. Nature of Self: Internal (commanding yourself) or External Locus of Control (outside forces command you).
3. Nature of Others: Loving or Hurtful, Honest or Dishonest
4. Purpose of Life: Spiritual Journey vs. Struggle for Survival
Service to Others vs. Quest for Power
5. Nature of God: Loving and Forgiving vs. Punishing
6. Family: Source of Love vs. Tension
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Term
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Definition
Adherence is a function of how much threat the patient perceives.
Moderate fear levels are best for patient adherence. This follows the Stress – Performance curve paradigm ( Yerkes-Dodson)
Perceived threat is a function of:
Perceived seriousness
Perceived susceptibility
External barriers to health care, such a finances and lack of insurance can prevent adherence even if the perceived threat is sufficient as there is a counter-balancing threat.
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Term
Patient Culture
Culture affects all stages of illness behavior |
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Definition
Experience of symptoms
Assumption of sick role
Medical care contact
Dependent patient role
Perceived Recovery
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Term
Assessment of Individual Illness Behavior |
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Definition
• Prior illness episodes, especially illnesses of standard severity (childbirth, renal stones, surgery)
ØCultural degree of stoicism (tough). Non-stoic (get them earlier).
ØCultural beliefs concerning the specific problem
ØPersonal meaning or beliefs about the particular problem
ØTRANSFERENCE
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Term
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Definition
the patient will try to hide any reaction to pain, anxiety, stress or confusion.
The patient believes that he should “just take it on the chin”, be “rational and not emotional”.
Waiting too long to seek treatment
Not reporting symptoms that would assist in the
diagnosis and treatment.
Not asking questions
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Term
Stoicism on the part of either the patient or the doctor can lead to |
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Definition
Unrelieved pain, which can hasten death. |
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Term
TRANSFERENCE:
TRANSFERENTIAL ATTITUDES
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Definition
A patient's attitude toward a physician
A repetition of the attitude he or she has had toward authority figures (physician).
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Term
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Definition
1. Realistic basic trust, with an expectation that the doctor has the patient's best interests at heart (good)
v2. over idealization (too much transference)
v3. eroticized fantasy (sexual behavior)
v4. one of basic mistrust, with an expectation that the doctor will be contemptuous and potentially abusive. (bad)
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Term
Transference Advice
-Your professional caring is likely to trigger in the patient a need to Give gifts of gratitude.
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Definition
Don't except it. Clarify your role with the patient and allow the patient to “save face”.
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Term
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Definition
-Protect us from realities that might cause conflict and anxiety by reducing the potential for anxiety.
-Protect us from anxiety (when ego and id collide).
The need for such protection through a defense mechanism is intensified by the stress of illness.
The Patients who are stressed about being ill may use more immature defense mechanisms!
Unconscious and are designed to protect our “ego” (the part of us that says who we should be) from unacceptable impulses that come from the “Id” (primitive drives for pleasure gratification,
aggression and sex).
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Term
Two Common Defense mechanisms |
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Definition
Denial: The patient unconsciously refuses to admit to being ill or to acknowledge the severity of the illness. Initially it protects us from fear but can be destructive if it prevents us from seeking care. Delusional Denial (deny reality).
Regression: The patient reverts to a more child-like pattern of behaving that may involve wanting more attention and time from the physician and others.
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Term
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Definition
This male patient is “in denial” about the impact his drinking has had on his life. He will use this denial to continue the behavior that is causing so much difficulty for him.
There are more pathological forms of denial in which the patient “Denies” the reality right in front of him or her – this form of denial is classically seen in psychosis.
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Term
What a Doctor Brings to the Patient |
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Definition
1. Personal Beliefs about Patients
2. Stereotyping
3. Attribution
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Term
Fundamental Attribution Error |
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Definition
We over-estimate the importance of the situation for ourselves.
We over-estimate the importance of internal characteristics (personality) for others.
-When others act bad, they’re Rude, Jerk. When it’s ourselves, it’s the situation.
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Term
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Definition
-Just as patients bring transferential attitudes to doctor–patient relationships,
doctors themselves often have counter-transferential reactions to their patients.
-May take the form of negative feelings disruptive to the doctor–patient relationship
Or may also encompass disproportionately positive, idealizing, or even eroticized reactions.
-Be alert to any change from professional caring to romantic caring.
-Countertransference is an inappropriate reaction. Effective medical care involves being objectively vigilant and monitoring oneself.
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Term
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Definition
Doctors may have problems with the following patients:
1. Those who repeatedly defeat attempts to help them
2. Those perceived as uncooperative
3. Those who request a 2nd opinion
4. Those who fail to recover after treatment
5. Those who use somatize (manifest mental pain as pain in one's body) their emotional problems
6. Those with chronic organic mental syndromes
7. Those who are in chronic pain
8. Those who are dying
9. Those with personality problems
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Term
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Definition
This patient gives little response to our initial inquiries.
Non-focusing, open-ended skills may be ineffective.
-Gives very little information.
-Some students prefer this patient, as they can move “quickly”. They may not recognize that the patient’s story is not being told.
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Term
The Overly Talkative Patient
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Definition
-This patient is irritating to those who prefer to control the interview process, and will be considered “easy to interview” by those interviews who are somewhat passive or uncertain about the interview.
-Developing an agenda is difficult. Respectfully and tactfully interrupt and redirect. Use firm, clear transition statements
“We need to now change our line of questions so that I can learn more about your constipation, if that is OK.”
-“Those are important details, but how did that make you feel emotionally?”
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Term
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Definition
1. Silence is often uncomfortable
2. Silence has many meanings and many uses
3. Patients may use this to collect their thoughts, remember details or decide whether to not they trust you.
4. Be alert for nonverbal clues of distress
5. Silence may be the result of the interviewer’s lack of sensitivity
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Term
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Definition
Anxiety is often a natural response
Severe anxiety is a cue to further problems
Be very sensitive to the non-verbal cues the patient gives you
It is tempting to be overly reassuring
Premature reassurance blocks communication
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Term
Angry and hostile patients
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Definition
Understand that anger and hostility are often natural reactions
Often anger is being DISPLACED onto the clinician
Do not get angry in return
Continue talking normally and checking with the patient
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Term
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Definition
Be accepting of the condition of intoxication. You cannot change it.
Do not challenge substance use during intoxication.
Do not attempt to have the patient change symptoms brought on by intoxication, such as a loud voice, cursing or slurring of words, clumsy movements or confusion.
Treat signs of potential violence as you would in any patient
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Term
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Definition
Be alert for signs of depression
Be sure you find out how severe the depression is
Talk about the depression openly and clearly
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Term
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Definition
Ask about the crying, do not ignore it
Be empathetic
(Don’t go there there, or stop crying, or there is no need to cry)
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Term
Sexually attractive or seductive patient
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Definition
Clinicians and patients may feel sexually attracted to the other
Be aware of your own feelings and SUBLIMATE the feeling in order to
care for the patient
Accept sexual attraction as normal but prevent it from affecting
your care of the patient
If a patient becomes seductive or makes sexual advances, frankly but
firmly make clear that your relationship is one of the health
care provider not a personal one.
(Always ask 1 question on the USMLE's)
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Term
Working with Difficult Patients |
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Definition
• Be aware of your own characteristics and preferences and how that impacts your responses to patients.
• Do not abandon the patient.
• Do not refer the patient to another health professional for anything other than a medical reason.
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Term
Responding to your patient
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Definition
1. Don’t assume the patient will like or trust you, treat all patients in an open, honest manner.
2. ***Monitor your own counter transference.
3. Be sure you understand the patient, seek information and check.
4. ***Admit when you have made a mistake.***
5.Do not refer a patient just to “be rid of them”, refer when it is beyond your specialization. Most psychological questions can be answered in a family practice.
6. Ask about the patient’s personal and health beliefs and integrate them with the patient’s care.
7. Find out about the patient’s religious beliefs and cultural practices and focus on the comfort of the patient.
8. Agree on what the problem is and negotiate the solution.
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Term
Her physician asks about recent stressors, she says that she has been arguing a lot with her parents, who are pressuring her to go to college. The physician, who is concerned because his own daughter refuses to go to college, begins to feel angry with the patient. The physician’s anger is an example of which of the following:
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Definition
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