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Posted by Jacob on August 28, 2005 at 10:56 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
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Posted by Jacob on August 27, 2005 at 08:41 AM in Technology | Permalink | Comments (0)
Dr. Reider is really easy to listen to – he’s entertaining and educational (the PBS of Med School).Hmm .. not sure what that means .. but I guess it's a compliment!
Posted by Jacob on August 27, 2005 at 05:31 AM in Medical Education | Permalink | Comments (0)
Posted by Jacob on August 27, 2005 at 01:28 AM in Psychiatry | Permalink | Comments (1)
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Posted by Jacob on August 26, 2005 at 10:25 AM in Technology | Permalink | Comments (0)
Posted by Jacob on August 24, 2005 at 09:28 AM in Technology | Permalink | Comments (0)
Beginning on a light note:
I playfully asked a nearly-three year old girl what she was going to be when she grows up. Without missing a beat ... "a woman" she says.
We'll see if I can sustain blogging this time. After nearly 4 years of blogging .. I took a break over the summer. Have been very busy with patients in the office and with some other projects that I hope to write about soon.
Today's reflection is about listening - something that physicians still do rather little of. Longtime readers (are any of you left?) will recall that I sometimes do reviews of physicians for the New York State OPMC. It's alwasy interesting to do this - and it is usually hard to witness and even participate in the end of a physician's career. The most recent participant is a kind person, and I think a rather good physician who made some mistakes and is therefore under review. We talked a lot about listening - and I heard so clearly that this physician felt that LISTENING to the patients is so important - yet so hard to convey in the chart. It's the quality of a "good physician" that we will never be able to guage from a chart review - or even a physician interview.
And so I was reminded when this evening - one patient talked for 35 minutes straight, and another asked (when I advised a counseling referral) why I can't be the counselor.
What usually gets documented in the chart is something like " we talked about _____ for __ minutes and greater than 50% of the visit was spent face-to-face counseling" The 50% part of course is to document for billing purposes that this was a counseling visit and therefore I am billing based on time. Ugh. It sure is a bad representation of what really happened. The richness of the experience - the connection - is not portrayed. Then again .. so what?
Posted by Jacob on August 24, 2005 at 06:12 AM in Attention Deficit | Permalink | Comments (0)
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