Patient Management - The Dentist-Patient Relationship
Posted by John Doe at Dental Assistant on January 1, 1970.
Categories: Dental Secrets
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After you seat the patient, a 42-year-old woman, she turns to you and says glibly, "Doctor, I don't like dentists." How should you respond?
Tip: The patient presents with a gross generalization. Distortions and deletions of information need to be explored. Not liking you, the dentist, whom she has never met before, is not a clear representation of what she is trying to say. Start the interview with questioning surprise in your voice as you cause her to reflect by repeating her phrasing, "You don't like dentists?," with the expectation that she will elaborate. Probably she has had a bad experience, and by proceeding from the generalization to the specific, communication will advance. It is important to do active listening and to allow the patient who is somewhat belligerent to ventilate her thoughts and feelings. You thereby show that you are different perhaps from a previous dentist who may not have developed listening skills and left the patient with a negative view of all dentists. The goals are to enhance communication, to develop trust and rap port, and to start a new chapter in the patient's dental experience.
As you prepare to do a root canal on tooth number 9, a 58-year-old man responds, "The last time I had that dam on, I couldn't catch my breath. It was horrible." How should you respond? What may be the significance of his statement?
Tip: The comment, "I couldn't catch my breath," requires clarification. Did the patient have an impaired airway with past rubber dam experience, or has some long ago experience been generalized to the present? Does the patient have a gagging problem? A therapeutic interview clarifies, reassures, and allows the patient to be more compliant.
A 36-year-old woman who has not been to the dentist for almost 10 years tells you, "My last dentist said I was allergic to a local anesthetic. I passed out in the dental chair after the injection." A 55-year-old man is referred for periodontal surgery. During the medical history, he states that he had his tonsils out at age 10 years and since then any work on his mouth frightens him. He feels like gagging. How do you respond?
Tip: In both cases, a remembered traumatic event is generalized to the present situation. Although the feelings of helplessness and fear of the unknown are still experienced, a reassured patient, who knows what is going to happen, can be taught a new set of appropriate coping skills to enable the required dental treatments. The interview fully explores all phases of the events surrounding the past trauma when the fears were first imprinted.
After performing a thorough examination for the chief complaint of recurrent swelling and pain of a lower right first molar, you conclude that, given the 80% bone loss and advanced subosseous furcation decay, the tooth is hopeless. You recommend extraction to prevent further infection and potential involvement of adjacent teeth. Your patient replies, "I don't want to lose any teeth. Save it!" How do you respond?
Tip: The command to save a hopeless tooth at all costs requires an understanding of the denial process, or the clinician may be doomed to perform treatments with no hope of success and face the likely consequences of a disgruntled patient. The interview should clarify the patient's feelings, fears, or interpretations regarding tooth loss. It may be a fear of not knowing that a tooth may be replaced, a fear of pain associated with extractions, a fear of confronting disease and its consequences, or even a fear of guilt due to neglect of dental care. The interview should clarify and inform while creating a sense of concern and compassion.
With each of the above patients, the dentist should be alerted that something is not routine. Each expresses a degree of concern and anxiety. This is clearly the time for the dentist to remove the gloves, lower the mask, and begin a comprehensive interview. Although responses to such situations may vary according to individual style, each clinician should proceed methodically and carefully to gather specific information based on the cues that the patient presents. By understanding each patient's comments and the feelings related to earlier experiences, the dentist can help the patient to see that change is possible and that coping with dental treatment is easily learned. The following questions and answers provide a framework for conducting a therapeutic interview that increases patient compliance and reduces levels of anxiety.
1. What is the basic goal of the initial patient interview?
To establish a therapeutic dentist-patient relationship in which accurate data are collected, presenting problems are assessed, and effective treatment is suggested.
2. What are the major sources of clinical data derived during the interview?
The clinician should be attentive to what the patient verbalizes (i.e., the chief complaint), the manner of speaking (how things are expressed) and the nonverbal cues that may be related through body language (e.g., posture, gait, facial expression, or movements). While listening carefully to the patient, the dentist observes associated gestures, fidgeting movements, excessive perspiration, or patterns of irregular breathing that ma hint of underlying anxiety or emotional problems.
3. What are the common determinants of a patient's presenting behavior?
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- The patient's perception and interpretation of the present situation (the reality or view of the present illness)
- 2. The patient's past experiences or personal history
- The patient's personality and overall view of life Patients generally present to the dentist for help and are relieved to share personal information with a knowledgeable professional who can assist them. However, some patients also may feel insecure or emotionally vulnerable because of such disclosures.
- Discuss the insecurities that patients may encounter while relating their personal histories.
Patients may feel the fear of rejection, criticism, or even humiliation from the dentist because of their neglect of dental care. Confidential disclosures may threaten the patient's self-esteem. Thus patients may react to the dentist with both rational and irrat1 comments, their behavior may be inappropriate and even puzzling to the dentist. In a severely psychologically limited patient (e.g., psychosis, personality disorders), behaviors may approach extremes. Furthermore, patients who perceive the dentist as judgmental or too evaluative are likely to become defensive, uncommunicative, or even hostile. Anxious patients are more observant of any signs of displeasure or negative reactions by the dentist. The role of effective communication is extremely important with such patients.
5. How can one effectively deal with the patient's insecurities?
Probably acknowledgment of the basic concepts of empathy and respect gives the most support to patients. Understanding their point of view (empathy) and recognition of their right to their own opinions and feelings (respect), even if different from the dentist's personal views, help to deal with potential conflicts.
6. Why is it important for dentists to be aware of their own feelings when dealing with patients?
While the dentist tries to maintain an attitude that is attentive, friendly, and even sympathetic toward a patient, he or she needs an appropriate degree of objectivity in relation to patients and their problems. Dentists who find that they are not listening with some degree of emotional neutrality to the patient's information should be aware of personal feelings of anxiety, sadness, indifference, resentment, or even hostility that may be aroused by the patient. Recognition of any aspects of the patient's behavior that arouse such emotions helps dentists to understand their own behavior and to prevent possible conflicts in clinical judgment and treatment plan suggestions.
7. List two strategies for the initial patient interview.
- During the verbal exchange with the patient all of the elements of the medical and dental history relevant to treating the patient's dental needs are elicited.
- In the nonverbal exchange between the patient and the dentist, the dentist gathers cues from the patient's mannerisms while conveying an empathic attitude.
8. What are the major elements of the empathic attitude that a dentist tries to relate to the patient during the interview?
- Attentiveness and concern for the patient
- Acceptance of the patient and his or her problems
- Support for the patient
- Involvement with the intent to help
9. How are empathic feelings conveyed to the patient?
Giving full attention while listening demonstrates to the a patient that you are physically present and comprehend what the patient relates. Appropriate physical attending skills enhance this process. Careful analysis of what a patient tells you allows you to respond to each statement with clarification and interpretation of the issues presented. The patient hopefully gains some insight into his or her problem, and rapport is further enhanced.
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