One year ago today, my book, When Doctors Don’t Listen: How to Avoid
Misdiagnoses and Unnecessary Tests, was published. My goal in this last
year has been to travel around the country and talk about the book and its
message of advocating to improve your health. I planned a 48-city
itinerary where I’d crisscross the U.S. from Massachusetts to California
and back. I’d speak at bookstores, libraries, nursing homes, universities, and
community centers.
What I didn’t anticipate was that this “speaking tour” would
turn into a “listening tour”.
From Boston to Los Angeles to Lexington to Cincinnati, people told me about their experiences with healthcare. Some, like 62-year old Annie from San Francisco, thought of themselves to be “e-patients”, or empowered patients. “I have a rare rheumatological illness that very few doctors have encountered,” she told me. “I bring research articles and educate my doctors.”
Others avoid doctors, like Janet, a 48-year woman from St. Louis who believes in “prevention, prevention, and prevention.” However, like many others I met, she sees healthcare providers nearly every week because she’s a caregiver to her elderly parents and her three children.
Over 2,000 people shared with me their frustrations with doctors, insurance companies, hospitals, and the healthcare system. I listened and learned.
Here are 10 themes that emerged:
People don’t know that they have options, especially when it comes to saying no. They are used to doctors telling them what they need; they are surprised when I mentioned that patients always have a choice to NOT get a test or NOT take medications. Few interventions are so emergent that patients need to obtain them immediately. Watching and waiting, discussing it further with the doctor, and obtaining a second opinion are reasonable alternative.
People want to please their doctors. In general, people like their doctors. Many feel they have to do what the doctor wants out of fear of displeasing them. “I lie and say I take medications I can’t afford,” 75-year Tony from San Antonio said. Others expressed their need for doctors to support their decisions. “Give me real choices and mean it,” says 38-year old Teresa. “Don’t judge me as being noncompliant just because I have a different value system.”
From Boston to Los Angeles to Lexington to Cincinnati, people told me about their experiences with healthcare. Some, like 62-year old Annie from San Francisco, thought of themselves to be “e-patients”, or empowered patients. “I have a rare rheumatological illness that very few doctors have encountered,” she told me. “I bring research articles and educate my doctors.”
Others avoid doctors, like Janet, a 48-year woman from St. Louis who believes in “prevention, prevention, and prevention.” However, like many others I met, she sees healthcare providers nearly every week because she’s a caregiver to her elderly parents and her three children.
Over 2,000 people shared with me their frustrations with doctors, insurance companies, hospitals, and the healthcare system. I listened and learned.
Here are 10 themes that emerged:
People don’t know that they have options, especially when it comes to saying no. They are used to doctors telling them what they need; they are surprised when I mentioned that patients always have a choice to NOT get a test or NOT take medications. Few interventions are so emergent that patients need to obtain them immediately. Watching and waiting, discussing it further with the doctor, and obtaining a second opinion are reasonable alternative.
People want to please their doctors. In general, people like their doctors. Many feel they have to do what the doctor wants out of fear of displeasing them. “I lie and say I take medications I can’t afford,” 75-year Tony from San Antonio said. Others expressed their need for doctors to support their decisions. “Give me real choices and mean it,” says 38-year old Teresa. “Don’t judge me as being noncompliant just because I have a different value system.”
People don’t want
more care—they want right care. People recognize the harms of overtesting
and overtreatment, and know that more
care isn’t always better. They know to be wary of industries with ulterior
motives. “Drug companies and insurance companies aren’t operating out of the
goodness of their hearts,” says Joseph, a 55-year from Providence. “There’s a
lot of money to be made money from healthcare.” They also fear rationing, and
caution that less isn’t more either. What they want is the right care, without personal or commercial
interests getting in the way.
People don’t expect perfection, but they demand transparency. They know that doctors aren’t omniscient; they just want them to share what they know. Uncertainty is fine, as long as they are told the truth. Also, people accept that doctors are human and that medical errors occur. They don’t aim for retribution, but they do want disclosure of the mistake and to know that the doctor is committed to addressing it.
People want more information to choose doctors and hospitals. “It’s disgraceful that I can find all types of information on choosing a coffee shop but I know next to nothing about my doctor,” 35-year old Jenny from Cincinnati says. People want to know about their doctors, not only their credentials, but also any financial conflicts of interests, their values, and who they are.
People know that hospitals aren’t hotels. They don’t expect valet parking and 3-course meals, but they do want to be treated with respect. If they’re cold, they want a blanket. If they’re thirsty, they want some water. Without compassion and addressing basic human needs, marble staircases and fancy MRIs are worthless. The same goes for doctors’ offices. Forget the fancy carpeting, but find staff who treat people with humanity and dignity.
People will wait if they get what they need. The dogma based on patient satisfaction survey results is that higher wait times leads to unhappy patients. However, the people I spoke with are unhappy not because they had to wait, but because they did not get what they expected despite the wait. “I waited two hours, and the doctor just spent five minutes with me,” said 49-year Sophie from Plymouth. Studies show that patients are interrupted in about 12 seconds; it’s no wonder people feel ignored and not listened to!
People don’t expect perfection, but they demand transparency. They know that doctors aren’t omniscient; they just want them to share what they know. Uncertainty is fine, as long as they are told the truth. Also, people accept that doctors are human and that medical errors occur. They don’t aim for retribution, but they do want disclosure of the mistake and to know that the doctor is committed to addressing it.
People want more information to choose doctors and hospitals. “It’s disgraceful that I can find all types of information on choosing a coffee shop but I know next to nothing about my doctor,” 35-year old Jenny from Cincinnati says. People want to know about their doctors, not only their credentials, but also any financial conflicts of interests, their values, and who they are.
People know that hospitals aren’t hotels. They don’t expect valet parking and 3-course meals, but they do want to be treated with respect. If they’re cold, they want a blanket. If they’re thirsty, they want some water. Without compassion and addressing basic human needs, marble staircases and fancy MRIs are worthless. The same goes for doctors’ offices. Forget the fancy carpeting, but find staff who treat people with humanity and dignity.
People will wait if they get what they need. The dogma based on patient satisfaction survey results is that higher wait times leads to unhappy patients. However, the people I spoke with are unhappy not because they had to wait, but because they did not get what they expected despite the wait. “I waited two hours, and the doctor just spent five minutes with me,” said 49-year Sophie from Plymouth. Studies show that patients are interrupted in about 12 seconds; it’s no wonder people feel ignored and not listened to!
People aren’t lazy when it comes to their health, and don’t always want the quick fix. Most people don’t want to go to their doctor at all, and prefer to find ways to improve their lifestyle and prevent disease. The popularity of diet and fitness books is case in point. Many do not want “the easy way out” in the form of drugs or surgery, but would rather discuss fitness, diet, and use of alternative therapies with their doctor. “It’s my doctor who doesn’t want to discuss these therapies with me,” says 22-year old Sandra.
With Dr. Jocelyn Elders and advocate Patty Skolnik |
People know that the
current system is unsustainable. No matter the politics, people saw the healthcare
system as being broken, and all of them as victims—and future change
agents. “It’s just like the environment: there are finite resources,” I heard
over and over. Since “free” and “cheap” weren’t synonymous with good care,
people are willing to pay out of pocket for better value (as long as it doesn’t
bankrupt their family). They are willing to share in the cost to society,
because they recognize they already are.
People crave
connection and caring. They want face-to-face interaction with “their”
doctor. They want to be listened to and heard. Knowing their medical history is
only the start; they also want their doctors to understand and connect with
them emotionally, physically, and spiritually. This requires a sustained relationship; people do
not want to go to “minute clinics” or use smartphone apps to access their
doctor, but rather long for a long-standing
relationship with an accessible, trustworthy provider.
By no means is this list meant to be exhaustive or intended to represent every one of the individuals I met. The very nature of healthcare is that it is personal and individual. These findings represent the thoughts and wishes of a broad spectrum of people across the U.S. They challenge conventional wisdom when it comes to what is needed in healthcare. For example, the rise of urgent-care centers and smartphone apps should be seen as failure, not progress. Similarly, reducing wait times or adding fancy office furniture is not the fix for patient dissatisfaction.
Reform proposals tend to target policy changes that become mired in rhetoric and statistics. What people want is more basic, and more achievable. Doctors need to be transparency and honest with patients. They need to move away sick care towards healthcare.
In the words of the great humanist and cardiologist Dr. Bernard Lown, we need to “do as much as possible for the patient, as little as possible to the patient.” Medical students need to learn shared decision-making and integrated care. Patients—people—should be part of every healthcare debate. Ultimately, we must restore medicine to being a caring partnership that prioritizes basic human dignity and respect.
My listening tour continues. Please share your thoughts below. I look forward to listening and learning.
By no means is this list meant to be exhaustive or intended to represent every one of the individuals I met. The very nature of healthcare is that it is personal and individual. These findings represent the thoughts and wishes of a broad spectrum of people across the U.S. They challenge conventional wisdom when it comes to what is needed in healthcare. For example, the rise of urgent-care centers and smartphone apps should be seen as failure, not progress. Similarly, reducing wait times or adding fancy office furniture is not the fix for patient dissatisfaction.
Reform proposals tend to target policy changes that become mired in rhetoric and statistics. What people want is more basic, and more achievable. Doctors need to be transparency and honest with patients. They need to move away sick care towards healthcare.
In the words of the great humanist and cardiologist Dr. Bernard Lown, we need to “do as much as possible for the patient, as little as possible to the patient.” Medical students need to learn shared decision-making and integrated care. Patients—people—should be part of every healthcare debate. Ultimately, we must restore medicine to being a caring partnership that prioritizes basic human dignity and respect.
My listening tour continues. Please share your thoughts below. I look forward to listening and learning.
14 comments:
Terrific Post! I would like to point out though that you comment that a patient has a right to say no to a treatment,however when it comes to Pediatric's, that is not always the case. Too many cases are now in the spotlight where the parents said no, asked for a second opinion and had Child Protective Services called to investigate them for "child endangerment".
Asking for a second opinion, or a different hospital can destroy a family.
I agree. This is a concern for many parents I know. And if they do their own research when not getting answers, or doctors neglecting their children, and they go elsewhere, the kids end up in foster care. In some instances they are lucky they come back in diapers at age 5 after the stress of being removed rather than lost forever. Read "Memoirs of a baby stealer", written by a foster parent in the medical field.
I’d speak at bookstores, libraries, nursing homes, universities, and community centers. homeremedieslog.com
These findings represent the thoughts and wishes of a broad spectrum of people across the U.S.side effects from garcinia cambogia
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i couldn't believe that i would ever be re-unite with my ex-lover, i was so traumatize staying all alone with no body to stay by me and to be with me, but i was so lucky one certain day to meet this powerful spell caster Dr Akhere,after telling him about my situation he did everything humanly possible to see that my lover come back to me,indeed after casting the spell my ex-lover came back to me less than 48 hours,my ex-lover came back begging me that he will never leave me again,3 months later we got engaged and married,if you are having this same situation just contact Dr Akhere on his email: AKHERETEMPLE@gmail.com thanks very much sir for restoring my ex-lover back to me,his emai: AKHERETEMPLE@gmail.com or call/whatsapp:+2349057261346
I like Janet’s approach. Not always are doctors right. I mean, I had to show mine one of the pieces by best research paper writing service uk based, with their authentic points determining what strategy was best to heal my MCL tear that occurred while playing football.
thanks a lot! Dr. Leana Wen, I appreciate your thought and blog. some people are alive still here who care for the patients Dr. Lena is one of them. this line of your blog "we need to “do as much as possible for the patient, as little as possible to the patient.” Medical students need to learn shared decision-making and integrated care" touched my heart. I'm a medical student when I'm busy with practicals I'm getting UK Dissertation Help from top writers to do more practice in the lab
I also wanted to join your program but it was my college paper time I attempt this program I will join your program next time, so help me with the next time help from Online Dissertation Help
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I really enjoyed reading this article. It was very informative and gave me a lot of insights into the life of a doctor. I was particularly interested in the section about the challenges of balancing work and personal life. I can imagine that it can be very difficult to find time for anything else when you are working long hours and dealing with the stress of being a doctor. I also found the section about the importance of accounting assignment help to be very helpful. I am currently a student in an accounting program and I know that I will need all the help I can get when it comes to my assignments. I will definitely be looking into accounting assignment help services when I need them.
I can relate to your frustration when doctors don't listen. It's so important to advocate for your health, especially during major life changes like menopause. Speaking of which, if anyone's going through Menopause Dubai, I've heard there are excellent healthcare options in the city. Remember, your health matters, and finding the right care is crucial. Thanks for sharing your experience!
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