Honesty in the Medical Profession?
Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 10:44 am | Posted in gripes, health | Leave a commentBeing quite familiar with the medical profession, I am more aware and educated than the average patient. Unfortunately yesterday was a day that tested my abilities in communication skills as well as assertiveness skills when I was on the other side of the desk.
In general, I think most patients, and especially the immigrant population tend to approach the medical profession with a paternalistic attitude. “Yes doctor… no doctor… whatever you say doctor” approach makes some patients feel comfortable. And to some degree, some patients even expect and demand this is the type of relationship with their care providers.
However, as baby boomers age, and people become more educated, this paternalistic model of relating to one’s health care providers is changing. I think more and more people are demanding to be an active participant in their care plan. It is becoming more collegial and less paternalistic. I think you see this shift in relationship as the population becomes more Caucasian, educated or fluent in the English language. They have more questions, and want to know more. Personally, I think it is only a good thing when a patient wants and desires to be an active participant in their plan of care. They are learning to take responsibility for their own health.
Personally for me, I am of the latter group, and prefer to know my options. I prefer to make an educated choice on my plan of care. I prefer not to be treated like a child, and told what needs to be done without any rationale or reasoning. Unfortunately in both Canada and the US, there are still physicians out there still practicing medicine with a paternalistic attitude. Usually, those are the ones I mentally think, “what a bad doctor” and silently vow to never book another appointment with.
In health care, patients need to realize that they always have a choice. Unfortunately there are some unscrupulous people out there who blatantly lie and tell the patient there is no choice.
Here are few examples of what I have seen 2nd hand or noticed occuring, that simply rubs me the wrong way:
1. 1st time pregnancy and labour for a couple. They are admitted to a teaching hospital for the delivery of the baby. The couple feels they have no choice in voicing their feelings and unease over a resident (i.e. medical student) delivering their child, while the attending physician looks on (i.e. does other things). As complications develop in the early stages, things get delayed, as it becomes more of a learning opportunity for the student rather than timely intervention by the health care professional. Does the couple have the right to say, “we want the attending physician to deliver our child instead of the resident or intern”?
2. Patient needs to recieve IV antibiotics and the RN is trying establish an IV line. Unfortunately this is an inexperienced RN, and he/she starts poking and moving the needle around, causing much pain to the patient. The patient tries to give the RN the benefit of doubt as RN fumbles around. The first try is unsuccessful. She is about to try the 2nd time around. Does the patient have the right to request a different RN to do the procedure, or must the patient wait till the RN tries several more times before it becomes evident to all how incompetent he/she is?
The above situations are not my personal experiences. However they are stories recanted to me by other people. Would you believe that in the first situation, the couple waited patiently for the resident to their proper job, all the while having feelings of unease about the whole deal? Would you believe that the soon to-be father was also a medical student in medical school? Would you believe that complications arose, and developed to the point where a C-section was required, and it was only at that point that the attending stepped in?
In the 2nd situation, the poor patient felt the RN was incompetent from the get go. Unfortunately she didn’t speak up until the RN was trying to get an IV line the THRID time around - unsucessfuly I might add. When a more experienced RN came, she was able to get a line with the first try, with little effort.
What are the patients’ rights? When can they speak up? In a good provider-patient relationship, the patient will always feel at ease and comfortable enough to ask questions when it arises. The patient will feel that they have options and control over their care plan. They will know they can always speak up, and voice their concerns… and it is always their right to ask for a different health care provider.
Exercise…
Wednesday, February 28, 2007 at 4:54 pm | Posted in exercise, health | Leave a commentExercise does the body good. It really does.
A long long time ago, in a very distant time, I used to be a jogger. Fell into the sport purely by accident. In my 2nd year of university, my university friend “L” decided we should go jogging together as she had recently picked up the sport. So she me took to the athletic center and we jogged. Let me tell you it was pretty difficult the very first time I ever went jogging. Time seemed to stand still, and 20 minutes seemed like forever. Every single minute was difficult.
But soon enough, 20 minutes of jogging became 30 minutes, and then 40 minutes. And before I knew it, I was jogging regularly. And days when I didn’t go jogging, I would crave the exercise. It was something that, no matter how hectic the schedule became, was prioritized as important and squeezed into the day.
But after graduation, the jogging stopped. I’m not sure what was the cause……. perhaps it was the busy schedule….. or perhaps it was hearing my opthamologist talking about the risk of retinal detachment. But whatever the cause, I simply stopped. And before I knew it, I had cut out exercise all together.
But today, we went to the gym. I got on the treadmill with the full intention of ONLY walking. But before I knew it, I was jogging. Mentally, I thought, “how can I possibly go jogging, if I haven’t jogged in ages!” But it was as if I hadn’t stopped. Incredibly, it’s almost like my muscles actually remembered how they had been used years ago. Almost like putting on an old pair of jeans. Granted I couldn’t jog longer than 30 minutes today… but it was rather surprising.
I forgot how much I enjoyed the sport. The steadiness of jogging, where your body falls into a natural rhythm, as you move your arms and legs into a smooth motion over and over again. The release of natural endorphins that occur about 10 minutes into the activity, that brings the sense of that you can literally go on forever. The little worries of the day falling away, as you simply concentrate on the activity at hand, and simply pound away at the pavement (er.. well.. treadmill).
Well… jogging leaves me refreshed. It’s different from praying. Praying does the mind, spirit, and soul a lot of good (and thus indirectly the body as well). Whilst jogging only does the body good. But man, is it ever so good. Almost good enough to make me to jogging again tommorrow!
well yet another post
Tuesday, February 6, 2007 at 12:47 am | Posted in health | Leave a commentSo finally, it seems that my tinnitis is starting to resolve, although my hearing is still a bit off. I think it’s now going into 2 full weeks where my ears haven’t popped. The weather we’re experiencing is so bitterly cold, that it makes me want to hibernate and stay home all day.
I have learnt to use google calendar quite a bit, and am gradually switching from a paper agenda to the google one. My only fear is that once I start becoming dependent on it, it will crash or doing something equally horrible. Somehow, it inevitably happens to me.
I was always the kid in school who made the network crash. Don’t know how I did it, but I do it all the time.
This coming Saturday, I’ll be going to LA for a couple of appointments out there. It’ll be the first time ever that I will have visted the “City of Angels”… and I can’t help but look forward to the trip, partially because it’s a new place, but also partially because I know that I’ll escape from this deep freeze we seem to be experiencing up here… albeit temporarily.
I can’t believe how fast times flies by these days. It just seems the year 2006 just flew by even before I had a chance to say, “boo!” Now we’re already into the month of February. Perhaps it’s all this travelling and going back and forth that makes me feel like my time is so short…
wow… sometimes I am just trying to catch my breath with all the changes going on.
Baurotrauma
Wednesday, January 31, 2007 at 5:11 am | Posted in health | Leave a commentThat is what I have. I’ve done a self diagnosis. After flying several times this week, with a head cold and congestion, I now have tinnitis (ringing of the ears), and a dampening of sound that has continued on for over 4 days!!!!
still sick
Monday, January 22, 2007 at 11:46 pm | Posted in health | Leave a commentAh…. I’m still sick. And to think that I actually believed I would go through this winter without catching the flu or cold. Every year, I have usually gotten a really bad case of the flu. Sometimes it lasts a few days, and other times, it lingers for months. I was so optimistic about this winter season.
Usually, I get a sore throat early on in the morning, and it disappears by noon. But today, it has simply progressed to something worse. I don’t feel like talking or even doing anything. I feel horrible. I can barely swallow. If “gulp” could be 2 syllables, that would be how I would be swallowing right now.
The only good thing is that I’m dressed warm and listening to itunes. At this point, only something mellow is what my ears can handle without being too irritating. I have “Grace flows down” by the Passion band playing on repeat at the moment. Ah… I feel horrible. Horrible I say. I absolutely hate getting sick.
On a good note, I have done a lot of blogging today. On a bad note, I’ve been too sick to do much else.
There is nothing like a warm cup of honey and lemon tea when you’re sick. It just hits the spot.
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