News

VIDEO: How to engage patients in their health


 

AT ACP INTERNAL MEDICINE 2014

ORLANDO – Asking your patients about where they get their health information online is the first step toward helping them become "e-patients" – engaged patients who change their behaviors to improve their health, explains Dr. Daniel Sands.

And a willingness to answer a patient’s question with "I don’t know" can be the first step to becoming an engaged physician.

Dr. Sands has coauthored the book "Let Patients Help!" with Dave deBronkart, better known as "e-Patient Dave." He’s also the cofounder and cochair of the Society for Participatory Medicine, so he knows a thing or two about engaging patients in their health care and creating better outcomes.

In a video interview during the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians, Dr. Sands, who is with the department of medicine at Harvard Medical School in Boston, explains how physicians can use patients’ own online searches for health care answers to better involve patients in their health, and how physicians can work together with patients via technology to create a more satisfying experience in their practices.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

nmiller@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @naseemmiller

Recommended Reading

Copy and paste at your own risk: The dangers of electronic ‘plagiarism’
MDedge ObGyn
ACA coverage may lead to more malpractice claims
MDedge ObGyn
IOM identifies 17 social factors to collect in EHRs
MDedge ObGyn
Medicare releases physician payment data
MDedge ObGyn
Physicians could get squeezed by Open Payments delay
MDedge ObGyn
Medicare data dump frustrates doctors
MDedge ObGyn
Budget chief Burwell tapped for HHS
MDedge ObGyn
ACP gives primary care and specialists tools for better referrals
MDedge ObGyn
VIDEO: The don'ts of social media for physicians
MDedge ObGyn
Where’s the evidence that medical apps are clinically useful?
MDedge ObGyn