Healthcasre Communication
By: Max • Essay • 308 Words • June 2, 2010 • 1,060 Views
Healthcasre Communication
Healthcare Communication is the Key Role in Patient Care
Once common in medical practice was building a good rapport between physicians and patients, but thanks to managed care's toll on physician's time and resources, is now almost obsolete. Gone are the days when physicians and patients actually communicated on a social level. When did physicians stop asking patients about their feelings and concerns? If a physician would encourage their patients to ask questions or voice their concerns about their care, instead of pushing them out of the exam room as fast as they can because they have a waiting room full of other patients waiting to be seen, patients would have more trust in their physicians. They would also be more forgiving if the situation arose.
Effective physician patient communication leads to decreased patient stress levels, improved adherence to treatment, and fewer medical malpractice lawsuits.
Physicians have always relied on nurses to communicate between them and their patients. Instead of taking a few more minutes of their precious time to talk with or reassure their patients, nurses get stuck in the "he