Nuances of Patient-Centricity
By Mario Moussa PhD MBA
By Jennifer Tomasik MS
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania are experimenting with an electronic nose that literally smells disease. In the not-too-distant future, it may be able to detect whether a patient has an infection in the lungs or somewhere else. There is no need to be radiated with an X-ray, or to wait anxiously for two days as bacteria sprouts from a biological sample. One simply lies in a hospital bed while the super-sensitive machine monitors the body’s exhalations.
Of Hippocrates
Hippocrates, the founding father of Western medicine, did it differently. He relied on smell, too. But, he used his actual nose. He sniffed and inspected his patients’ stool, as well as their earwax, pus, and phlegm. Then he went further, recording the details of his patients’ diets, the water they drank, the local weather, and even the positioning of their house. He spent a lot of time getting to know the highly personal facts of his patients’ lives. He was an early practitioner of individualized and holistic medicine.
Rise of the Historical Symptoms Review
But, doctors in the Hippocratic tradition have not always had this kind of intimate relationship with their patients. In 17th. and 18th. century Europe, the standards of human dignity imposed limits, especially on physical contact. Health providers were just as likely to scrutinize the story of an illness as its observable symptoms. Dr. John Symcotts, who had a successful practice that encompassed two English villages, captured his patients’ narratives in casebooks that contained vivid descriptions of intense subjective experiences. One patient, Miss Christian Tenum, complained of “a heavy burden or weight continually pressing down upon the top of her head,” a “pulsing of the arteries,” and “images passing before her eyes.” The diagnosis was unclear. Symcotts prescribed a fluid diet and a medicine that helped her expel stones with her urine. The outcome? Miss Tenum was cured.
Subjective Reporting
In Symcotts’ era, physicians treated subjective reporting as a valid source of information. Using an ancestral form of telemedicine, they even based diagnoses on letters. John Morgan, a founder of the University of Pennsylvania’s Medical School in the late 1700s, offered his expert opinion on patients who lived “ a distance from Philadelphia, whenever the history of the case is properly drawn up and transmitted to me for advice.” Why the emphasis on spoken and written first-hand accounts? In the words of one physician, there was a “repugnance” to physical examination that was “natural and proper.”
Link: www.BusinessofMedicalPractice.com
Bottom line: intimacy can take strikingly different forms. This is especially important to remember in the world of Health 2.0, where you have so many choices for communicating.
In purely human terms, we think the relationship that Hippocrates had with his patients was neither better nor worse than the one Symcotts had with Miss Tenum or that Morgan had with his epistolary advice-seekers. Hippocrates paid meticulous attention to a patient’s circumstances: emotional outlook, diet, bodily secretions, family relationships and friends, climate, dwelling. Symcotts may not have known his patient in all of these ways, but he could hardly have been more committed to understanding Miss Tenum’s story in her own terms.
Conclusion
And so, your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. In different, but equally valid ways, can Hippocrates, Symcotts, and Morgan be considered patient-centered? Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.
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Filed under: "Doctors Only", Ethics, Practice Management, Quality Initiatives |















Is a liberal arts education good preparation for being a doctor?
In 1980 the cultural historian G. S. Rousseau, citing the techo-scientific nature of modern medicine, claimed that doctors no longer maintained the rich tradition of physicians as humanists.
“Until recently, physicians in Western European countries received broad, liberal educations, read languages and literature, studied the arts, were good musicians and amateur painters; by virtue of their financial privilege and class prominence they interacted with statesmen and high-ranking professionals, and continued in these activities through their careers.”
What do you think?
http://www.thehealthculture.com/2011/06/is-a-liberal-arts-education-good-preparation-for-an-md/
Ann Miller RN MHA
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New Online Medical Provider List
Consumers looking to compare doctors and hospitals are getting a new resource as the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation launches an online state-by-state directory of healthcare providers. The directory features an interactive map of the 50 states that consumers can click on to access 197 state-level and 27 national quality databases set up by nonprofits, health plans and government agencies nationwide.
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/health/la-heb-health-quality-20110628,0,5212989.story
Donna
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Doctor as Humanist
Jennifer and Mario – In 1980 the historian G.S. Rousseau expressed concern that modern physicians no longer embodied the humanist tradition of their predecessors.
Now that medicine had overwhelmingly become a science and not an art, he claimed, the interests and accomplishments of physicians had narrowed.
http://www.consultantlive.com/blog/how-health-happened/display/article/10162/1851617
Sharon
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It’s nice to be appreciated
I received a flattering patient review this morning on doctoroogle.com I’d like to share. Even if I never become wealthy, this is what makes my job worth it, friends.
http://www.doctoroogle.com/83147?code=AQDLVUTXon3-hgVN2tRYtJ1gsuKqyeh02ptXVYab7ATn3jEBok5PgItWQc8winNlCENJBCGcdpaClpk6V58-WMWvl9zLisozor0mwmKuWr2DbvCk-KYaHlAbPDtIczaOxlsEwKa-ImYCZzVc1ZetQAU2EqM2F5BVaeSJvbyBqYLxV8RPRCHioheLsgPrPQGFrBI#_=_
I MISS this dentist like I miss my family! Due to my insurance I was forced to find a new dentist a few years ago. And, even though the new one is a good dentist, there isn’t a moment where I wish it was Dr. Pruitt instead. After many many years of letting my teeth rot I decided it was time to grow up and get over my fear of dentists. Little did I know this guy would completely make getting dental work feel like a vacation. I’m the kind of person who doesn’t tolerate pain very well and he was extremely careful and considerate in making sure I was 130% comfortable the entire time. They even got me in super fast so a lot of my dental work could be completed before heading overseas for vacation! I could NOT be more pleased with this dentist and highly recommend him to everyone I know even though I no longer see him (truth be told I’m a bit jealous of them!).
The staff is wonderful too! Make sure you appreciate Dr Pruitts art work. It’s no wonder he’s a great dentist … he knows how to pay attention to detail and he REALLY cares about you!! I wish I had more money. I would see him in a heartbeat if I could afford it. Hopefully someday that will be a reality!
If I were you I wouldn’t even LOOK for another dentist … HE’S THE ONE!
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To avoid ‘difficult’ label, patients take passive role in care decisions
Mario – In a step backwards for shared decision-making, many patients surrender their authority to physicians because they fear being labeled “difficult,” concludes a study from the Palo Alto (Calif.) Medical Foundation Research Institute.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/05/07/BATB1OA7VQ.DTL
Madge
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Some patients fear speaking up will upset their doctors
Why? They worry that asking questions would affect the quality of care negatively.
http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2012/05/21/prsd0523.htm
Hudson
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