Title: Administration Rounds Session 1
1Administration RoundsSession 1
- Yael Moussadji, PGY3
- Emergency Medicine
- Preceptor Dr. Roger Galbraith
2Why is Administration Important?
- Historically, Emergency Medicine had no
legitimacy, no specialized field of knowledge and
expertise, no organization, and no identity - It had no specialty status, no training programs,
no board certification process, and no respect - Today, EDs face multiple contemporary issues
including staff shortages, overcrowding and
ambulance diversions, increased workplace stress,
and environmental concerns - Administration, and administrators, in a variety
of capacities have worked to bring our specialty
out of the past, and continue to enrich it
through the current challenges that we face
3The Role of Adminstration in Emergency Medicine
- Advocacy
- Professional Education
- Clinical standards of practice and policies
- Research
- Practice Management
- Leadership and leadership development
- Interest groups and networking, and identity
- Wellness and well-being
- Service to the public
4Roles
- Advocacy
- Despite being a young specialty, EM needs an
active and aggressive public relations and
lobbying effort in order to ensure public
knowledge of its existence and public support and
endorsement of its goals and agendas - Professional Education
- This involves both Residency training programs
and conferences in order to educate ED care
providers with the unique body of knowledge that
is emerging
5Roles
- Clinical Practice Guidelines/Standards
- EM must establish a set of its own clinical
guidelines that have not only ethical
considerations, but reflect the unique realities
of the ED population and environment - Research
- We need a network of information and
information-sharers that allows researchers to
communicate and that provides research results to
the ED community - We need to support EM research financially, and
provide a vehicle for training researchers and
publishing their work - The research of EM must answer the questions
posed by the practitioners of EM
6Roles
- Leadership
- If we are to develop credibility as a
full-fledged specialty, we must develop our own
leaders to become spokespersons and advocates,
who will then become involved in other areas of
influence such as hospital adminstration,
governmental agencies, private industry, and
larger professional societies - Practice Management
- ED managers must acquire a specialized skill set
that allows them to manage a highly developed,
multiple tasking, technology driven complex
environment where patients with a huge variety of
problems are encountered by a large degree of
highly specialized personnel, all in a cost
effective and efficient manner
7Roles
- Wellness and well-being
- Ways of enhancing wellness and limiting stress
have to be found in order to promote longevity
and long term survival of the specialty - Service
- This is the most intangible, but most
significant it is why we do what we do and is
what maintains the ultimate success of our
specialty - Medical ethics, QI, medical error,
communications skills are all contributors
8Communication Skills
- Breaking Bad News
- Telephone Advice
- Conflict Resolution
9Breaking Bad News
- Bad news is defined as any news that negatively
alters the patients or family members view of
his or her future - Hippocrates advised concealing most things from
the patient while you are attending to him. Give
necessary orders with cheerfulness and serenity
reveal nothing of the patients future or present
condition. - Now, with an emphasis on patient autonomy and
empowerment, we know that the majority of
patients desire and deserve full disclosure
10Literature
- What patients and families experience
- Use of technical language (eg. relative risk)
- Breaking of bad news in a hallway or location
lacking privacy - Neglecting to offer social or clergy supports
- Perceived lack of sympathy, lack of information,
and being unable to answer questions - Neglecting to prepare family members of the
possibility of an autopsy
11Literature
- What patients and families want
- A clear, direct statement of the news
- Time to talk together in private
- Openness to emotion
- Ongoing involvement in decision making
- Diversity among patients and families
- In a study of 54 surviving family members of
patients who died from trauma, 9 desired a hug,
handholding, or a pat on the shoulder when
receiving bad news 16 did not want any type of
physical touching
12Physicians and Bad News
- Most of us struggle with giving bad news because
we dont have adequate training in giving it,
have a fear of being blamed and not knowing all
the answers, and fear our own emotional reactions - Consensus guidelines have been created to help us
- Following traumatic deaths, the most important
features judged by families were the attitude of
the person giving it, the clarity of the message,
privacy, and the newsgivers ability to answer
questions - Therefore, it is not an isolated skill, but a
particular form of communication with which we
need to be comfortable - Our own humanity may at times be the most
powerful healing instrument
13The ABCDEs of Giving Bad News
- A Advanced preparation
- B Build a therapeutic environment/relationship
- C Communicate well
- D Deal with patient and family reactions
- E Encourage and validate emotions
14Advance Preparation
- Know the relevant clinical data, review the
medical record and talk with consultants - Arrange for adequate time in a comfortable quiet
room with seating for all involved and determine
who should attend - Consider the goals of the meeting
- Mentally rehearse how you will give the news
- Prepare emotionally
- Take a step back
15Build a Therapeutic Relationship
- This stage is where you build rapport and trust
- Introduce yourself to everyone and ask for names
and relationship to the patient - Determine what the patient and family want to
know and already know - Use pacing and reflective listening to quickly
demonstrate empathy and compassion - Provide a brief summary of the patients illness
16Communicate Bad News
- Speak slowly, deliberately, clearly, presenting
information in small chunks - Foreshadow the bad news Im sorry, but I have
bad news or I have difficult news pause for a
moment - Speak frankly and compassionately, avoiding
medical jargon and euphemisms - Use the words cancer or death
- Once the news is delivered allow for silence and
a chance to absorb the information and respond
this pause allows the anticipatory grief of all
the implications of this news, and the way they
are responded to can determine the future course
of the acceptance process
17Deal with Reactions
- Assess and respond to emotional reactions
- Allow the patient time to talk early and often
encourage questions and provide information at
their pace - Check their understanding to make sure they are
receiving the information we are giving - Communicate compassion, kindness, caring, and
empathy by acknowledging, validating, and
relfecting emotion - It is appropriate to say I dont know
18Encourage, Validate, Provide Support
- Offer realistic hope and explore what the news
means to the receiver ask if there is something
we can do to help - Use interdisciplinary services to enhance care
and facilitate their access to support - Bring closure to the interview, and outline the
potential next steps for the family - Remain available to the family while they remain
in the ED - Notify the GP and enlist their help in follow-up
- Self-reflect
19Conflict Management in the ED
- All human interactions have the potential to
develop conflict - Defined as a disagreement within oneself or
between people that has the potential to cause
harm - Usually involves differences in ideas,
perspectives, priorities, beliefs, values, and
goals - The organizational structure of the ED can also
contribute
20The Natural History of Conflict
- Phase 1
- One or more parties with experience frustration,
a strong imperative undirected emotion that
almost always demands rapid attention - Phase 2
- Conceptualization and rationalization of the
cause in order to crystallize thoughts and
feelings into action - Phase 3
- Expression on conflict a series of behaviours
directed toward our constructed cause - Phase 4
- Formalizes the conflict situation as behaviours
result in destructive outcomes
21The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, by
Steven Covey
- While stressors responsible for conflict may be
unavoidable or inappropriately conceptualized,
the behaviours and outcomes can be modified by
prolonging the time between phases 2 and 3 - Group exercise Identify a conflict situation you
experienced recently at work. What was the
stimulus? - Make a note of the differences that caused the
disagreement - Describe the phases of conflict and whether it
involved differences of values, skills,
priorities, or organizational structures?
22Accelerators of Conflict
- Role and identity issues
- Performance, function, and process factors (as
determinants of role conflict) - Differing goals and individual differences
- Problems with communication and feedback
- Power and rivalry, lack of support and
collegiality - Absence of role modeling and expertise
23Four Ways of Handling Conflict
- Avoidance - denying existence of conflict
- Accomodation - letting the other party decide
- Competition aggressively pursuing ways to
achieve your goal - Collaboration actively looking after your own
interests but not losing sight of the interests
of others
24Conflict Management Styles
- Avoid
- Usually involves no declaration from one of the
parties and therefore no cooperation is sought - Useful as a short term strategy when there is a
lot of heat rarely useful for long term change - Accommodate
- Places the emphasis on achieving the others
desired outcome - Expedient, but unlikely to result in a long term
solution - Compete
- Entails little cooperation
- Works when outcomes are most important and
resources are limited works against attempts to
forge cohesiveness - Collaborate
- Most time consuming and draining best suited for
sustainable change
25Comparing Ways of Handling Conflict
26Group Exercise cont
- Each management style entails a different level
of assertion and cooperation - Describe the way in which you handled your
conflict
27Outcomes of Conflict
- Constructive
- Growth occurs
- Problems are resolved
- Groups are unified
- Productivity is increased
- Commitment is increased
- Destructive
- Negativism results
- Resolutions diminish
- Groups divide
- Productivity decreases
- Satisfaction is decreased
28Conflict in Emergency Medicine
- Diversity in training, experience, and
perspectives between colleagues - Differences in professional opinion and value
systems - Effects of sleep deprivation and stress on
interpersonal communication - Lack of understanding of triage and role of ED,
excessive patient demands - Telephone conversations and lack of face to face
contact with consultants
29Communication and Conflict with Patients
- Physician-patient relationship is sudden and
occurs with little choice - Frequent mismatch between the patients
perspective of his/her illness and ours, which
are impacted by social, cultural, and language
barriers as well as differences in response to
illness - Patients are often under the influence of
substances or disease states which can impair
their judgment, or may refuse to consent for or
comply with medical treatment
30Strategies for Effective Patient Communication
- Instead of viewing the disease as the central
issue and the patient in the background, start to
view the patient as the central figure in the
context of the illness or injury (shifts the
motivation from treating the disease to treating
the patient with the disease) - Strategies to do this include conducting a more
patient centred interview by sitting at the
bedside, being eye to eye level, asking
open-ended questions, and being as non-directed
as possible (time permitting) - Avoid an authoritarian approach, which can
escalate during stress and fails to recognize
patient fears and concerns - Use a collaborative or participatory approach
- Patients will respond more positively to a
physician who is perceived to be genuinely
interested in their well being
31Dos and Donts of Patient Communication
- Do
- Sit
- Make eye contact
- Use the patients name
- Touch the patients arm or shoulder while
examining them - Ask open-ended questions
- Involve the patient in treatment options
- Find out the patients concerns
- Dont
- Stand over the patient
- Chart while talking
- Refer to the patient by their presenting
complaint - Touch the patient using only tools
- Use only yes or no questions
- Ignore the patients fears
32Communication with Nursing
- Good nursing is crucial to emergency medicine
- Nursing is defined as the diagnosis and
treatment of human responses to actual and
potential health problems - Borders between emergency nursing and emergency
medicine are more indistinct than they are in
other specialties, which contributes toward
collaborative practice - Therefore, failure to develop shared values can
breed conflict
33Collaboration with Nursing
- Nursing often provides the humanistic components
of communication time, patient education, and
direct care - Recognize their value and expertise in order to
achieve our common purposes - Other opportunities for collaboration include MM
rounds, involvement in academic research
projects, and social events (team building
exercise)
34Communication Between Medical Colleagues
- The strongest perceived predictor of positive
communication is the physicians perceived
autonomy - Negative communication experiences are associated
with perceived environmental stress - Differing value systems can result in
unreasonable demands or lack of availability of
consult services, diagnostic, or therapeutic
modalities - Telephone consultation provides little feedback,
limited time for discussion, and is impacted by
excessive background noise, incomplete data, and
inopportune timing
35Approach to Conflict Resolution in the ED
36Take Home Points
- Establishing consensus and reaffirming common
goals is the first step toward conflict
resolution (providing the best care possible to
patients and families) - Avoid accusations of laziness, not answering
pages, or unresponsiveness - Listen actively, have respect and display
empathy, maintain a professional demeanor - Compromise, but not on care
- Be specific in your expectations, communicate
clearly