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Let's “face” it: Time to introduce yourself to patients

At the core of a good physician is mastery of critical communication skills. Good communication establishes rapport and can also heal patients. As communication is an essential ingredient of good physicianship, the recipe starts with a fundamental staplethe physician introduction. The physician introduction is step 2 of Kahn's etiquette‐based medicine checklist to promote good doctoring.[1] Although such rudimentary communication skills are cemented in kindergarten, sadly, more training is needed for doctors. In a recent Journal of Hospital Medicine study, interns failed to introduce themselves in 3 out of 5 inpatient encounters.[2]

Despite waning introductions, increasing importance is being placed on hospitalized patient's knowledge of their treating physician's name and role for patient safety. The Transitions of Care Consensus Policy Statement endorsed by 6 medical societies, including the Society of Hospital Medicine, recommend patients know who their treating physician is while caring for them at every step across the continuum, including hospitalization.[3] The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education requires that patients be informed of who the supervising physician is and understand the roles of any trainees in their care.[4] Last, the death of young Lewis Blackman in South Carolina resulted in state legislation requiring clear identification of physicians and their roles for patients.[5] Given these recommendations, tools to remind physicians to introduce themselves and explain their role to patients are worth consideration. In this issue of the Journal of Hospital Medicine, the effectiveness of 2 interventions using physician photo tools is described.[6, 7]

Even though both studies advance our knowledge on the effectiveness of such interventions, nonrandom variable uptake by physicians represents a major common hurdle. Physician workload, competing priorities, and time pressures prevent physicians from distributing such tools. Consistent adopters of the cards likely already introduce themselves regularly. Interestingly, physicians likely withhold the cards from patients they perceive as unsatisfied, who ironically have the most to gain. System changes, such as increasing handoffs and transient coverage with resident duty hours, can also hamper tool effectiveness through the introduction of more physicians to remember, inherently decreasing the ability of patients to identify their treating physicians.[8]

Patient factors also affect the success of such interventions. Interestingly, patients' baseline ability to identify their physician ranged from 11% to 51% in these studies. Such differences can be readily attributed to previous disparities noted by age, race, gender, and education level in patient recall of their physician.[8] Future work should target interventions for these subgroups, while also accounting for the high prevalence of low health literacy, memory impairment, sleep loss, and poor vision among inpatients, all of which can hamper such interventions.[9, 10]

Although neither intervention improved overall patient satisfaction, patient satisfaction is influenced by a variety of factors unrelated to physician care, such as nursing or the environment. Given the inherent ceiling effect in patient satisfaction metrics, both studies were underpowered to show minor differences. It is also worth noting that complex social interventions depend on their context. Although some patients may enjoy receiving the cards, others may feel that it is not critical to their patient satisfaction. Using a realist evaluation would ask patients what they thought of the cards and why.[11] Like one of the authors, we noted that patients do like the cards, suggesting the problem is not the cards but the metrics of evaluation.[12]

In addition to robust evaluation metrics, future interventions should incorporate patient‐centered approaches to empower patients to ask their doctors about their name and role. With the request coming from patients, doctors are much more likely to comply. Using lessons from marketing and advertising, the hospital is full of artifacts, such as white boards, wristbands, remote controls, and monitors, that can be repurposed to advertise the doctor's name to the patient. Future advances can exploit new mobile technologies and repurpose old ones, such as the hospital television, to remind patients of their care team and other critical information. Regardless of what the future may bring, let's face itintroducing yourself properly to your patients is always good medicine.

References
  1. Kahn MW. Etiquette‐based medicine. N Engl J Med. 2008;358(19):19881989.
  2. Block L, Hutzler L, Habicht R, et al. Do internal medicine interns practice etiquette‐based communication? A critical look at the inpatient encounter. J Hosp Med. 2013;8(11):631634.
  3. Snow V, Beck D, Budnitz T, et al. Transitions of Care Consensus policy statement: American College of Physicians, Society of General Internal Medicine, Society of Hospital Medicine, American Geriatrics Society, American College of Emergency Physicians, and Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(6):364370.
  4. ACGME Common Program Requirements. Available at: http://www.acgme.org/acgmeweb/Portals/0/PFAssets/ProgramRequirements/CPRs2013.pdf. Accessed November 12, 2013.
  5. Landro L. The Informed Patient. Patients Get Power of Fast Response. Available at: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052970204047504574384591232799668. Accessed November 12, 2013.
  6. Simons Y, Caprio T, Furiasse N. The impact of facecards on patients' knowledge, satisfaction, trust, and agreement with hospital physicians: a pilot study. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(3):137141.
  7. Unaka NI, White CM, Sucharew HJ. Effect of a face sheet tool on medical team provider identification and family satisfaction. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(3):186188.
  8. Arora V, Gangireddy S, Mehrotra A, Ginde R, Tormey M, Meltzer D. Ability of hospitalized patients to identify their in‐hospital physicians. Arch Intern Med. 2009;169(2):199201.
  9. Yoder JC, Staisiunas PG, Meltzer DO, Knutson KL, Arora VM. Noise and sleep among adult medical inpatients: far from a quiet night. Arch Intern Med. 2012;172(1):6870.
  10. Press VG, Shapiro MI, Mayo AM, Meltzer DO, Arora VM. More than meets the eye: relationship between low health literacy and poor vision in hospitalized patients. J Health Commun. 2013;18(suppl 1):197204.
  11. Ogrinc G, Batalden P. Realist evaluation as a framework for the assessment of teaching about the improvement of care. J Nurs Educ. 2009;48(12):661667.
  12. Arora VM, Schaninger C, D'Arcy M, et al. Improving inpatients' identification of their doctors: use of FACE cards. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2009;35(12):613619.
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At the core of a good physician is mastery of critical communication skills. Good communication establishes rapport and can also heal patients. As communication is an essential ingredient of good physicianship, the recipe starts with a fundamental staplethe physician introduction. The physician introduction is step 2 of Kahn's etiquette‐based medicine checklist to promote good doctoring.[1] Although such rudimentary communication skills are cemented in kindergarten, sadly, more training is needed for doctors. In a recent Journal of Hospital Medicine study, interns failed to introduce themselves in 3 out of 5 inpatient encounters.[2]

Despite waning introductions, increasing importance is being placed on hospitalized patient's knowledge of their treating physician's name and role for patient safety. The Transitions of Care Consensus Policy Statement endorsed by 6 medical societies, including the Society of Hospital Medicine, recommend patients know who their treating physician is while caring for them at every step across the continuum, including hospitalization.[3] The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education requires that patients be informed of who the supervising physician is and understand the roles of any trainees in their care.[4] Last, the death of young Lewis Blackman in South Carolina resulted in state legislation requiring clear identification of physicians and their roles for patients.[5] Given these recommendations, tools to remind physicians to introduce themselves and explain their role to patients are worth consideration. In this issue of the Journal of Hospital Medicine, the effectiveness of 2 interventions using physician photo tools is described.[6, 7]

Even though both studies advance our knowledge on the effectiveness of such interventions, nonrandom variable uptake by physicians represents a major common hurdle. Physician workload, competing priorities, and time pressures prevent physicians from distributing such tools. Consistent adopters of the cards likely already introduce themselves regularly. Interestingly, physicians likely withhold the cards from patients they perceive as unsatisfied, who ironically have the most to gain. System changes, such as increasing handoffs and transient coverage with resident duty hours, can also hamper tool effectiveness through the introduction of more physicians to remember, inherently decreasing the ability of patients to identify their treating physicians.[8]

Patient factors also affect the success of such interventions. Interestingly, patients' baseline ability to identify their physician ranged from 11% to 51% in these studies. Such differences can be readily attributed to previous disparities noted by age, race, gender, and education level in patient recall of their physician.[8] Future work should target interventions for these subgroups, while also accounting for the high prevalence of low health literacy, memory impairment, sleep loss, and poor vision among inpatients, all of which can hamper such interventions.[9, 10]

Although neither intervention improved overall patient satisfaction, patient satisfaction is influenced by a variety of factors unrelated to physician care, such as nursing or the environment. Given the inherent ceiling effect in patient satisfaction metrics, both studies were underpowered to show minor differences. It is also worth noting that complex social interventions depend on their context. Although some patients may enjoy receiving the cards, others may feel that it is not critical to their patient satisfaction. Using a realist evaluation would ask patients what they thought of the cards and why.[11] Like one of the authors, we noted that patients do like the cards, suggesting the problem is not the cards but the metrics of evaluation.[12]

In addition to robust evaluation metrics, future interventions should incorporate patient‐centered approaches to empower patients to ask their doctors about their name and role. With the request coming from patients, doctors are much more likely to comply. Using lessons from marketing and advertising, the hospital is full of artifacts, such as white boards, wristbands, remote controls, and monitors, that can be repurposed to advertise the doctor's name to the patient. Future advances can exploit new mobile technologies and repurpose old ones, such as the hospital television, to remind patients of their care team and other critical information. Regardless of what the future may bring, let's face itintroducing yourself properly to your patients is always good medicine.

At the core of a good physician is mastery of critical communication skills. Good communication establishes rapport and can also heal patients. As communication is an essential ingredient of good physicianship, the recipe starts with a fundamental staplethe physician introduction. The physician introduction is step 2 of Kahn's etiquette‐based medicine checklist to promote good doctoring.[1] Although such rudimentary communication skills are cemented in kindergarten, sadly, more training is needed for doctors. In a recent Journal of Hospital Medicine study, interns failed to introduce themselves in 3 out of 5 inpatient encounters.[2]

Despite waning introductions, increasing importance is being placed on hospitalized patient's knowledge of their treating physician's name and role for patient safety. The Transitions of Care Consensus Policy Statement endorsed by 6 medical societies, including the Society of Hospital Medicine, recommend patients know who their treating physician is while caring for them at every step across the continuum, including hospitalization.[3] The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education requires that patients be informed of who the supervising physician is and understand the roles of any trainees in their care.[4] Last, the death of young Lewis Blackman in South Carolina resulted in state legislation requiring clear identification of physicians and their roles for patients.[5] Given these recommendations, tools to remind physicians to introduce themselves and explain their role to patients are worth consideration. In this issue of the Journal of Hospital Medicine, the effectiveness of 2 interventions using physician photo tools is described.[6, 7]

Even though both studies advance our knowledge on the effectiveness of such interventions, nonrandom variable uptake by physicians represents a major common hurdle. Physician workload, competing priorities, and time pressures prevent physicians from distributing such tools. Consistent adopters of the cards likely already introduce themselves regularly. Interestingly, physicians likely withhold the cards from patients they perceive as unsatisfied, who ironically have the most to gain. System changes, such as increasing handoffs and transient coverage with resident duty hours, can also hamper tool effectiveness through the introduction of more physicians to remember, inherently decreasing the ability of patients to identify their treating physicians.[8]

Patient factors also affect the success of such interventions. Interestingly, patients' baseline ability to identify their physician ranged from 11% to 51% in these studies. Such differences can be readily attributed to previous disparities noted by age, race, gender, and education level in patient recall of their physician.[8] Future work should target interventions for these subgroups, while also accounting for the high prevalence of low health literacy, memory impairment, sleep loss, and poor vision among inpatients, all of which can hamper such interventions.[9, 10]

Although neither intervention improved overall patient satisfaction, patient satisfaction is influenced by a variety of factors unrelated to physician care, such as nursing or the environment. Given the inherent ceiling effect in patient satisfaction metrics, both studies were underpowered to show minor differences. It is also worth noting that complex social interventions depend on their context. Although some patients may enjoy receiving the cards, others may feel that it is not critical to their patient satisfaction. Using a realist evaluation would ask patients what they thought of the cards and why.[11] Like one of the authors, we noted that patients do like the cards, suggesting the problem is not the cards but the metrics of evaluation.[12]

In addition to robust evaluation metrics, future interventions should incorporate patient‐centered approaches to empower patients to ask their doctors about their name and role. With the request coming from patients, doctors are much more likely to comply. Using lessons from marketing and advertising, the hospital is full of artifacts, such as white boards, wristbands, remote controls, and monitors, that can be repurposed to advertise the doctor's name to the patient. Future advances can exploit new mobile technologies and repurpose old ones, such as the hospital television, to remind patients of their care team and other critical information. Regardless of what the future may bring, let's face itintroducing yourself properly to your patients is always good medicine.

References
  1. Kahn MW. Etiquette‐based medicine. N Engl J Med. 2008;358(19):19881989.
  2. Block L, Hutzler L, Habicht R, et al. Do internal medicine interns practice etiquette‐based communication? A critical look at the inpatient encounter. J Hosp Med. 2013;8(11):631634.
  3. Snow V, Beck D, Budnitz T, et al. Transitions of Care Consensus policy statement: American College of Physicians, Society of General Internal Medicine, Society of Hospital Medicine, American Geriatrics Society, American College of Emergency Physicians, and Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(6):364370.
  4. ACGME Common Program Requirements. Available at: http://www.acgme.org/acgmeweb/Portals/0/PFAssets/ProgramRequirements/CPRs2013.pdf. Accessed November 12, 2013.
  5. Landro L. The Informed Patient. Patients Get Power of Fast Response. Available at: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052970204047504574384591232799668. Accessed November 12, 2013.
  6. Simons Y, Caprio T, Furiasse N. The impact of facecards on patients' knowledge, satisfaction, trust, and agreement with hospital physicians: a pilot study. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(3):137141.
  7. Unaka NI, White CM, Sucharew HJ. Effect of a face sheet tool on medical team provider identification and family satisfaction. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(3):186188.
  8. Arora V, Gangireddy S, Mehrotra A, Ginde R, Tormey M, Meltzer D. Ability of hospitalized patients to identify their in‐hospital physicians. Arch Intern Med. 2009;169(2):199201.
  9. Yoder JC, Staisiunas PG, Meltzer DO, Knutson KL, Arora VM. Noise and sleep among adult medical inpatients: far from a quiet night. Arch Intern Med. 2012;172(1):6870.
  10. Press VG, Shapiro MI, Mayo AM, Meltzer DO, Arora VM. More than meets the eye: relationship between low health literacy and poor vision in hospitalized patients. J Health Commun. 2013;18(suppl 1):197204.
  11. Ogrinc G, Batalden P. Realist evaluation as a framework for the assessment of teaching about the improvement of care. J Nurs Educ. 2009;48(12):661667.
  12. Arora VM, Schaninger C, D'Arcy M, et al. Improving inpatients' identification of their doctors: use of FACE cards. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2009;35(12):613619.
References
  1. Kahn MW. Etiquette‐based medicine. N Engl J Med. 2008;358(19):19881989.
  2. Block L, Hutzler L, Habicht R, et al. Do internal medicine interns practice etiquette‐based communication? A critical look at the inpatient encounter. J Hosp Med. 2013;8(11):631634.
  3. Snow V, Beck D, Budnitz T, et al. Transitions of Care Consensus policy statement: American College of Physicians, Society of General Internal Medicine, Society of Hospital Medicine, American Geriatrics Society, American College of Emergency Physicians, and Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(6):364370.
  4. ACGME Common Program Requirements. Available at: http://www.acgme.org/acgmeweb/Portals/0/PFAssets/ProgramRequirements/CPRs2013.pdf. Accessed November 12, 2013.
  5. Landro L. The Informed Patient. Patients Get Power of Fast Response. Available at: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052970204047504574384591232799668. Accessed November 12, 2013.
  6. Simons Y, Caprio T, Furiasse N. The impact of facecards on patients' knowledge, satisfaction, trust, and agreement with hospital physicians: a pilot study. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(3):137141.
  7. Unaka NI, White CM, Sucharew HJ. Effect of a face sheet tool on medical team provider identification and family satisfaction. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(3):186188.
  8. Arora V, Gangireddy S, Mehrotra A, Ginde R, Tormey M, Meltzer D. Ability of hospitalized patients to identify their in‐hospital physicians. Arch Intern Med. 2009;169(2):199201.
  9. Yoder JC, Staisiunas PG, Meltzer DO, Knutson KL, Arora VM. Noise and sleep among adult medical inpatients: far from a quiet night. Arch Intern Med. 2012;172(1):6870.
  10. Press VG, Shapiro MI, Mayo AM, Meltzer DO, Arora VM. More than meets the eye: relationship between low health literacy and poor vision in hospitalized patients. J Health Commun. 2013;18(suppl 1):197204.
  11. Ogrinc G, Batalden P. Realist evaluation as a framework for the assessment of teaching about the improvement of care. J Nurs Educ. 2009;48(12):661667.
  12. Arora VM, Schaninger C, D'Arcy M, et al. Improving inpatients' identification of their doctors: use of FACE cards. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2009;35(12):613619.
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Journal of Hospital Medicine - 9(3)
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Let's “face” it: Time to introduce yourself to patients
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Address for correspondence and reprint requests: Vineet M. Arora, MD, 5841 S. Maryland Ave, MC 2007, AMB W216, Chicago, IL 60637; Telephone: 773‐702‐8157; Fax: 773‐834‐2238; E‐mail: varora@uchicago.edu
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