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Good Medicine Is About Good Relationships

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By Edwin Leap, M.D.

An emergency physician, like me, may be the worst possible person to discuss relationships with patients.  I mean, one of the reasons I chose this specialty was that I didn’t want long-term relationships with my patients.  I see, now, that God has a great sense of humor.

See, the county I landed in after residency is small enough that I do know many of my patients, and I do see them more often than you might imagine.  After all, our hospital is ‘the only game in town.’

There are some patients I know quite well, and thus I know with reasonable accuracy who is sick and who isn’t, based on how they looked or behaved before.  It doesn’t always work, but frequently it does.

Which brings me to trends in primary care.  I don’t know if I’m really a primary care provider or not.  Some years we are, some years we’re considered specialists.  Whatever.  It doesn’t really change the work.  It might change the pay, as administrations place different emphasis from time to time.  But I do see a lot of primary care.  I watch internists and pediatricians, family physicians and ob/gyns do their work.  And what I see, from the standpoint of the emergency room, is a drift away from relationship.

The thing that brings it up most poignantly is the trend towards hospitalists.  For those of you not acquainted, the hospitalist is a physician whose practice is focused on admitting patients to the hospital, caring for them, and discharging them back to their regular physicians (if they have one) when the acute situation is over.

Now, I know some great hospitalists.  And I understand the need for them.  As hospital care becomes more complex, as offices suffer when their docs are at the hospital, as the goal becomes ‘discharge as soon as possible,’ wherein utilization review committees are prime-movers, the idea of the hospitalists makes great sense, and probably bears much fruit.

However, a relationship is severed.  We have many community physicians who do not do hospital work.  And more now that the hospitalist option exists.  So let’s say I have patient X in the evening or on the weekend.  His physician doesn’t admit.  I call the hospitalist.  ‘Patient X is having chest pain.  His cardiac labs and EKG look alright, but it just seems concerning to me.  Can we admit him?’  Hospitalist:  ‘well, he doesn’t have risk factors and everything looks OK, what are we going to do?  Do a second set of labs and let him see his doc tomorrow.’

Now, that was a technically correct encounter.  But if his own doc had been on call, as in the past, he might have said ‘I’ve known him for years.  He doesn’t complain.  That isn’t like him.  Let’s keep him overnight.’  Scientific?  Maybe not.  Possibly useful?  Absolutely.

See, the hospitalist is driven by admissions and discharges.  And he or she has no abiding relationship with these patients.  In the same way, the family physician who won’t admit has severed his relationship.  ‘So, I see you were admitted last week!’  He’ll get a report.  But the next serious illness that comes around will still be a situation in which the patient is admitted to a stranger with a lack of personal interest (I don’t mean that they don’t care, just that they aren’t personally connected over a long period of time).

I see both sides.  The hospitalist has a focused mission and a busy service.  The family doc has a focused mission and a struggling office to run.  But somewhere in between is the patient, who has been left afloat between two continents.  I guess the ER is the ‘desert island’ in between.

I don’t know the answer.  But I know that when they come to my emergency department, I have

Doctor and boy looking at thermometer, Norman Rockwell

Doctor and boy looking at thermometer, Norman Rockwell

to  put together the pieces and do the right thing.  I don’t have all of the information.  But before you scream ‘EMR,’ remember that medicine is more than data points.  Even if I have the data, I don’t have the sense of the patient.  The knowledge his or her physician has from personal, repeated interaction.

So I have to put the data together, decide if it heralds something perilous, and then I have to be a salesman…just to get someone else to look at the patient.  I am, in a sense, a voice-activated robotic surrogate for everyone; from family physician to hospitalist, obstetrician to urologist, ENT to general surgeon.  But then, that’s another post altogether.

What I mean to say is, when we lose relationship, we lose some of the most important bits of information in all of medicine.  Humans are complex, and in order for us to care for them, at least in the setting of being hospitalized or discharged, it’s remarkably useful to know them.

What do we do to fix it?  I have no idea.  I don’t believe it’s a thing that can be repaired with compensation schemes.  Perhaps only philosophically, as we teach young physicians the value of relating to their patients more than scientifically.  Or if it works better, to explain to them that science is more than labs, stress-tests, x-rays and biopsies.  Science is the pursuit of knowledge.

And patients are best known by…knowing them.

How’s that for a koan?

Edwin

The Friday Funny: Science Versus Pseudoscience

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I know this one’s been floating around the blogosphere for a while, but it finally made its way to me at a time when I needed something lighthearted and amusing (warning: some profanity and at least one use of the “F” word):

Best quotes:

“Well, science doesn’t know everything.” Well, science knows it doesn’t know anything, otherwise it would stop … But just because science doesn’t know everything doesn’t mean you can fill in the gaps with whatever fairytale most appeals to you.”

…”nutritionist” isn’t a protected term. Anyone can call themselves a nutritionist. “Dietitician” is the legally protected term. “Dietician” is like dentist, and “nutritionist” is like tootheologist.”

“I’m sorry if you’re into homeopathy. It’s water. How often does it need to be said? It’s just water. You’re healing yourself. Why don’t you give yourself the credit?

I just wish more comics did routines like this. Sometimes humor can get the message through where analysis can’t.

*This blog post was originally published at Science-Based Medicine*

CT Scan Of The Week: Death Lungs

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The worst case of pulmonary metastases that I have seen. 40-year-old woman, operated for primary lung malignancy (adenocarcinoma) a year ago. Note the reduced lung volume on the right side.

Further Reading:

Robotic Nurse Assistant Can Carry Patients Around Hospitals

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riba_2.jpg

The Japanese are gearing up for a time when there are more elderly folks needing assistance than there are young whippersnappers available to do the chores. The RIBA, or Robot for Interactive Body Assistance, is a 400 pound (180 kilos) device designed by engineers at the RIKEN institute and Tokai Rubber Industries to carry people up to 135 pounds (61 kilos) between hospital beds, wheelchairs, and even toilets. The device is full of tactile sensors to make carrying safe and comfortable for patients, and it can even recognize faces and be commanded via voice to perform basic tasks. The only problems, from our point of view, is the inadequacy of this robot of serving the hefty average American and the menacing demeanor of what looks like a space bear without the personality of Chewbacca.

Here’s a demo video of the RIBA…

Link: Google translation of Japanese info page about the RIBA

More from the Pink Tentacle

*This blog post was originally published at Medgadget*

Will The Battle Against Obesity Spur On Eating Disorders?

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At a time when two thirds of Americans are either overweight or obese, health officials are correctly warning that most of us need to lose weight. But we may be setting ourselves up for a surge in eating disorders.

The two main types of eating disorders are food restricting (commonly referred to as “anorexia”) and binge eating and purging (commonly referred to as “bulimia”). The disorders typically begin in adolescence and affect women much more commonly than men.

Statistics are tough to come by – partly because of under-diagnosis and incomplete reporting – but a
recent review estimated that 500,000 women in the U.S. have anorexia and 1-2 million women have bulimia.

The National Eating Disorders Association has a higher estimate, with “as many as 10 million females and 1 million males” suffering from either one of the two disorders. Recent reviews have reported that 90 percent of patients with bulimia are female but the rate in men appears to be increasing in recent years.

A key feature of an eating disorder is the disparity between perception and reality. Over the past thirty years, obesity (BMI >= 95th percentile) in teenagers increased from 5.0 percent to 17.6 percent. While that rate has skyrocketed, it’s still much lower than the perceived rate of obesity among students.

Among children in grades nine through 12, 10 percent of females were obese and 15.5 percent were “at risk” for becoming obese (BMI >=85 percentile but <95th percentile). Yet 38.1 percent of students described themselves as overweight and 61.7 percent were trying to lose weight.

Put another way, more than half the women trying to lose weight were not overweight.

Why do people who are not overweight think they need to lose weight? There’s no simple explanation. Experts believe that genetic, environmental, psychological, and social factors can all play a role in eating disorders.
Studies suggest that movies, magazines, and television contribute to eating disorders by idealizing overly thin women and exacerbating body dissatisfaction, especially in people with low self-esteem. Fashion magazines often feature models with obvious signs of anorexia. The theme is clear: less is more.

My intuition tells me we’re at a tricky point in the national discussion of weight. Since research suggests that the wrong public message can be especially dangerous for patients at risk of an eating disorder, we need to be very careful as we develop strategies against obesity. As they create their plans, agencies such as the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) should include experts in eating disorders.

For this week’s CBS Doc Dot Com, I talk to Leslie Lipton and her father, Roger, about how Leslie has successfully battled anorexia. Click below to watch the video:


Watch CBS News Videos Online

I also interviewed Dr. B. Timothy Walsh, a renowned expert on eating disorders and Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University Medical Center and author of the book, “If Your Adolescent Has an Eating Disorder.” Click below to watch the video:


Watch CBS Videos Online

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