Showing posts with label emergency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emergency. Show all posts

Monday, November 22, 2010

Richard C. Senelick, M.D.: Angry Patients Make Angry Doctors: Tips for Coping With the Stress of an Emergency

What happens when disaster strikes? No one goes on the Internet and orders up a stroke or brain injury. It's not something that you plan for or are prepared to cope with. As health care professionals, we deal daily with families who are angry because they didn't ask for this tragedy and are having a very difficult time dealing with it. We too are under unusual stresses with our autonomy taken away and the confines of payers (insurance companies) restricting us in ways we may feel unreasonable. Just like the families in distress, health care professionals feel a loss of control. The people who successfully navigate these events can turn a negative experience into something positive.

We know Sarah Brady had to be very angry when her husband, Jim, was shot during the assassination attempt on President Reagan. However, from this she and her husband became the leading advocates for gun control and eventually saw the Brady Bill passed. The anger was turned around into something constructive.

Patient Stories
Frequently, we just see and hear the anger, but don't really hear the story or the feelings behind the rage. Ellen had a brain injury eight years ago and she recalls: "The clock just stopped ticking the day I was injured. I no longer felt connected to my family, my friends or my job. I looked around at my family and they were all angry, but I couldn't remember the accident, so I didn't know what to be angry about. I feel an enormous loss of who I was, what I had and what I might have become. But, my family has other feelings. They are angry at the person who caused the injury. They seem angry that I don't try hard enough to get better. They get angry and embarrassed by my behavior. And, they get angry at the lack of financial resources and the poor service of the health care delivery system. My doctor thinks my parents are unrealistic and that we need to be more accepting of what my futures looks like. Everybody just seems upset and distressed."

Her doctor is upset. He's busy, having to see more patients in the same day for less money. He can't just order the tests that he wants because he has to ask permission. Ellen's family is constantly calling with the same questions and they just "don't seem to get it." "Why don't they just accept the way things are and make my life easier?" On a particularly bad day, Ellen's father suggested that her doctor didn't care enough and that he was having a lawyer look into the case. The usually patient doctor lost it, yelling at Ellen's father and telling him to get a new doctor if he didn't appreciate what he was doing and particularly since he had mentioned the "L-word," a lawyer.

Ellen's family and the doctor's reaction are not unusual. They are both dealing with real losses. Mothers tell me constantly how they look at their injured child and know it is someone that they love deeply, but that the person they are taking home from the hospital after a brain injury is someone else. They have lost part of the person who used to be. Both the family and the doctor have lost control of the situation and both are angry.

2010-11-15-ANGERSHUTTER1.jpg


Why Are They Angry?

  • Both have a perception of having lost control of the problems that are causing them distress. Families may feel swept up in a system that doesn't care or can't make their child better. Doctors share the same concerns and frustrations, having to adapt to a new way of delivering care that seems to move them out of a position of control.

  • Parents may feel responsible that a child had an accident. A wife may be angry with the patient for getting sick. A husband is mad because his wife is not supposed to get sick. The doctor is upset because she has done everything she knows to do and the patient isn't improving. She's not used to being a target for people's anger and wants to be the recipient of their praise for a job well done.

  • Society gets angry for having to deal with difficult people who can't just fit into the system. Look at the anger of employers towards the American's with Disabilities Act. Why should I have to make concessions? Is it my fault that Ellen is different?

  • Families and patients are angry with a public that tends to patronize the disabled and look at them as "less than whole." I have parents who want to put a sign on their disabled child that says, "He is not retarded!" This, in and of itself, reveals their own prejudice toward our citizens with mental handicaps. It is not easy.

  • Everybody is troubled by the "miracle stories" that show up on the front page of the newspaper tabloids and on the latest television gossip shows. Health care professionals resent the "false" expectations that are being set. Families are particularly upset because the miracle didn't arrive at their home.


Coping With Anger
Iris Dement, one of our most soulful singers, wrote a song that could be the anthem for patients and doctors: "Easy's gettin harder every day." Ms. Dement can be hard to reach, so I sat down with Hal Hoine Ph.D., Director of Rehabilitation Psychology at the Rehabilitation Institute of San Antonio (RIOSA). Although Ms. Dement clearly identifies the problem, Dr. Hoine gives us ways to cope and deal with our anger. In particular, health care professionals need to realize that these strategies also apply to them, not just to patients and families.

Take Control
People have the perception of having no control and being attacked. You need to identify those things that you can control, make a list of those things that fit into two columns -- those things you have control over and those you don't. Identify strategies to get input into the system. Education and information are power. Families and professionals are helpless when they don't understand what is going on and don't know how to access the necessary tools to manage a difficult situation.

Illogical Thinking
Under the enormous stress of terrible tragedies, we don't always think logically. We feel responsible for events when we are not. The parent didn't cause the accident and the doctor is not responsible for an insurance plan that doesn't provide adequate coverage. Talk about the anger. Identify the sources of distress. Help all involved to think logically about an illogical circumstance. Frequently no one is to blame. Rabbi Kushner wrote the wonderful little book, "When Bad Things Happen to Good People." It is natural to shift blame to a God who doesn't care, a doctor who is inaccessible, or an insurance plan that is heartless. It is natural to shift blame, but not constructive. We need to acknowledge self-responsibility and the difficulties it proposes.

The White Coat
As health care professionals we frequently hide behind the white coat and feel that it allows us to be immune from the wrath of angry families and patients. It should add responsibilities. Health care professionals need to listen and let their patients and families ventilate. Never argue! We want to talk angry families out of their position and convince them that we are right. The younger the doctor or therapist the more difficulty they have in this role. This is not a contest. The white coat comes with an obligation to absorb the abuse and anger. When the angry family refuses psychological help or counseling, we accomplish nothing by abandoning them or getting angry ourselves. Continue to listen, encourage the patient and family to gain control and continue to constantly educate them. Understand your own feelings when a patient or family ventilates and gets angry; remember that you are the outlet for their anger. If the doctor or therapist is having difficulty controlling their anger, they should seek help. There are seminars and courses for professionals. We frequently ask the family to seek help, but how often do we seek it for ourselves?

Maintain Hope
It's like walking a tight rope or precipice at times, maintaining hope while trying to give patients and families a realistic view of the future. It's hard work for everyone, holding on to hope can be essential, but difficult. It's our job to intervene at the person's current level of distress and disturbance, understanding not only their feelings, but our own. Control the anger.

?

?

?

Follow Richard C. Senelick, M.D. on Twitter: www.twitter.com/RichardSenelick

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read our FAQ page at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php
Five Filters featured article: Beyond Hiroshima - The Non-Reporting of Falluja's Cancer Catastrophe.


View the original article here

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Why you need the free lesson plans emergency?

By javeria, October 22, 2010

Why you need the free lesson plans emergency?

Teachers are certainly classroom administrators in academic calendar. Driving way fellow students so that they can run in the fiscal year ending reviews. The responsibility of the teacher's guide students through their lessons with free lesson plans. These plans are editable and should be available to all teachers working with the same object and students.In many cases, there is the accidental events in this case, substitute teacher when the teacher is unable to take classes; performs regular duties. To perform better, the surrogate must free lesson plans for emergency needs.
If the absence of the regular teacher pré-planifiés, it is certainly not a problem for the teacher substitutes can get enough time to compare, to prepare and organize lesson plans. But in case of emergency situations, most people are confused about what to do. For these people, free lessons emergency are very useful. In these circumstances, you can certainly look at the Organization soon with free lesson plans for emergency situations.These lesson plans are now found in all the départements.Les teachers are now enough about these issues in particular concerned. However, some of them created in their own lesson plans. Rather, they pick up some generic free lesson for the emergency plans.
It is very important that you create free lesson plans for yourself emergency or unexpected proxy. These free lesson plans will help you track the progress and success of your methods in a very organized manner. You can get a few ideas here in view of the preparation of free lesson plans:
Put some titles of all chapters in your lesson gratuits.Les plans chapters that you would not cover, you must also have a few questions about them. The overall plan organized and kept very clean.Get your students involved in works by your class.Organize some assignments in your gratuits.Cela lesson plans will help your students to become autonomous.
Try to highlight issues should be discussed in a descriptive manner and repair.Were also a few notes short small chapitres.tenter provide the spreadsheet to your students.Worksheets is independent in your lesson free plans are useful for students when they prepare at home.
Your free lesson plans should commit and fun for students, and you should always prepare a way interactive.Vous must push your students in the procedures for learning descriptive.Mis in some games, puzzles or games of words to make free lesson plans more authentique.Une once you have created emergency, free lesson plans you are ready to everything.

George Shirey is an author and education entrepreneur based out of Florida and the lesson plans for teachers and more information on the free lesson plans, lesson teacher élèves.En and obtain supply more information about the book teaching tool visit our site for teacher lesson plans .Obtenir more information about The middle ages - Europe

.

You must be logged on to publish a comment.

This entry transmitted via the service for full-text RSS - if this is your content and you read on someone to another site, please read our FAQ page fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php
Article five filters features: After Hiroshima - non-rapport Cancer Catastrophe of Fallujah.


View the original article here