I was flummoxed that the man designated as my trained surgical assistant needed me to ‘talk him through’ the procedure. I wonder if he would be willing to be ‘talked through’ flying an airplane or defusing a bomb for the first time. I’m sure that the patient’s family seated nervously in the waiting room would be reassured by his brash confidence to proceed on their elderly relative.
Was I nervous? Not at all because I knew that this man wasn’t going to touch my patient. I relieved him on the spot and arranged for the procedure to be performed by an individual trained to do so.
What if I had decided to ‘talk him through’ the procedure?
What if he didn’t disclose that he was inexperienced?
How much do patients really know about the competence of their physicians and those who assist them?
Studies have shown that most patients believe that their personal physicians are highly qualified, but how do they really know this? The scary truth is that they don’t and they can’t. Even experts in quality assessment can’t agree on how to measure medical competence, so I doubt that ordinary patients have cracked the code of this enigma.
Next posting I’ll offer some the ways that experts measure medical quality and why they don’t quite measure up.
Over the years, I have treated various medical professionals from physicians to nurses to veterinarians to optometrists and to occasional medical residents in training. Are these folks different from other patients? Are there specific challenges treating folks who have a deep knowledge of the medical profession? Are their unique risks to be wary of when the patient is a medical professional? First, it’s still a running joke in the profession that if a medical student develops an ordinary symptom, then he worries that he has a horrible disease. This is because the student’s experience in the hospital and the required reading are predominantly devoted to serious illnesses. So, if the student develops some constipation, for example, he may fear that he has a bowel blockage, similar to one of his patients on the ward.. More experienced medical professionals may also bring above average anxiety to the office visit. Physicians, after all, are members of...
Wow! All I can say is,Yikes!
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