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Unavailable76: 5 Traits Patients Want Their Doctors to Have
Currently unavailable

76: 5 Traits Patients Want Their Doctors to Have

FromThe Premed Years


Currently unavailable

76: 5 Traits Patients Want Their Doctors to Have

FromThe Premed Years

ratings:
Length:
38 minutes
Released:
May 7, 2014
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Session 76 Back in Session 62, Allison talked about how it was being a patient after being diagnosed with Crohn's disease. Now it's Ryan's turn to take the patient's seat being diagnosed with a lesion in his spinal cord. In today's episode, Ryan and Allison share some lessons they've learned which they hope to pass on to you as you go through your premedical or medical education so you can hold on to them once you're practicing. Ryan and Allison have put together 5 traits that make a good physician (from a patient's point of view). Don't be negligent. Besides the fact that you can be sued for this, it could be disastrous for the patient. Always get back to a patient especially when you need to read some findings. Look at each patient as a person, not a number. Use data to try to drive how to treat patients but patients are people and every case is different. Treat each one individually as a human being and not as a number or case. Cater to their individual needs and concerns. Be willing to understand the research but deviate from it when needed or when a patient is different. Just be straightforward. Level with people. Remove the doctor-patient divide. Do not condescend and talk down to people. Be mindful of the stress and chaos going through your patients. Be aware that what you do everyday is normal for you, not for the patient. Typically, they're in a state of chaos as benign as it may be. So you need to disperse the information to them and at the same time reflect on what they're going through. Patients can easily google things but explain certain terminologies to them to give them security and a better understanding. Integrate clinical knowledge with research knowledge. Even if you're a research-based physician, remember that you are healer and you need to embody that when you're seeing patients. Change your mindset when you go to the office and you're with a patient. The SOAP acronym when taking notes: Subjective (Patient history) Objective (Physical exam) Assessment (Differential diagnosis) Plan (What you're going to do about it) Ryan and Allison modified the SOAP acronym when taking notes into SOAPIER: Subjective Objective Assessment Plan Intimate Empathy Reflect In the end, as Ryan was walking out the door his neurologist took 5 seconds to put her hand on his arm and tell him that's he's going to be okay and that made all the difference to him as a patient. Ultimately, just be a person. Links and Other Resources: Session 062: Allison's Story - When the Doctor Becomes the Patient Session 056: Taking Care of Patients in Today's Electronic World Session 050: 16 Golden Rules of Medicine If you need any help with the medical school interview, go to medschoolinterviewbook.com. Sign up and you will receive parts of the book so you can help shape the future of the book. This book will include over 500 questions that may be asked during interview day as well as real-life questions, answers, and feedback from all of the mock interviews Ryan has been doing with students. Are you a nontraditional student? Go check out oldpremeds.org. For more great content, check out www.mededmedia.com for more of the shows produced by the Medical School Headquarters including the OldPremeds Podcast and watch out for more shows in the future! Free MCAT Gift: Free 30+ page guide with tips to help you maximize your MCAT score and which includes discount codes for MCAT prep as well. Hang out with us over at medicalschoolhq.net/group. Click join and we'll add you up to our private Facebook group. Share your successes and miseries with the rest of us. Check out our partner magazine, www.premedlife.com to learn more about awesome premed information. Next Step Test Prep: Get one-on-one tutoring for the MCAT and maximize your score. Get $50 off their tutoring program when you mention that you heard about this on the podcast or through the MSHQ website. Listen to our podcast for free at iTunes: medicalschoolhq.net/itunes and
Released:
May 7, 2014
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

The Premed Years is an extension of MedicalSchoolHQ.net. Started by Ryan Gray and his wife Allison who are both physicians, it is another means of bringing valuable information to pre med students and medical students. With interviews with deans of medical schools, chats with trusted, valuable advisors and up-to-date news, The Premed Years and MedicalSchoolHQ.net are the goto resources for all things related to the path to medical school. We are here to help you figure out the medical school requirements. We will show you how to answer the hard questions during your medical school interviews. What is a good MCAT Score? What is the best MCAT Prep? What the heck is the AMCAS? What is the best undergraduate program? What is medical school like? What so you do to volunteer and shadow? Get your questions answered here.