RightHealth
July 10, 2008

Daily Dose Friday: Do Sour Patients Get Poorer Care?

Some personalities are more difficult to deal with. That’s the nature of life. But, do difficult patients receive lesser medical care? That is the question Dr. Dena Rifkin is asking in her post from Poked & Prodded.

In her post Dr. Rifkin describes two scenarios – one steadfastly polite and appreciative patient, and the other a more coarse an persistently angered personality. Does one receive better care than the other? This got me thinking about my experiences with my own patients. There are times when 15 minutes spent with an ornery patient feels like an eternity, and times when 15 minutes fly by because a particular patient is so pleasant to engage with. There are times when I get frustrated that a patient isn’t following my advise, and times when I feel life as a physician is easy because a compliant patient received a good outcome. However, the trick is to treat all your patients equally, regardless of the nature of the encounter. How each physician does that it up to their style.

For every one physician there are thousands of patients, each with their own personalities and medical experiences. It is the job of the physician to be able to adapt to and understand each of his or her patients and be able to work with them in order to provide the best medical care possible. However, a patient’s personality can definitely be a factor in the doctor-patient relationship. To a certain extent, if someone isn’t willing to engage and share responsibility in their medical care, they may not receive the outcome they are hoping for. Just as much as we want patients to get well, we need the patient’s help in getting there. And when it comes to more “difficult” patients, I don’t believe that they necessarily get worse medical care. Doctors, as I have come to know them, tend to be perfectionists and their own worst critiques. I have faith that regardless of how difficult a patient or situation may be (within reasonable limits), a physician will do his or her best to offer the same quality of care to each patient.

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2 Responses to “Daily Dose Friday: Do Sour Patients Get Poorer Care?”

  1. Jim Says:

    My Doctor and I had a falling out because he was prone to using drugs as nutritional supplements and got a little huffy when I mentioned I was taking some supplements. He wanted me on statis even though my cardiologist said I was not a cxandidate for statins. His attitude changed toward me after I refused the statins.

  2. linda Says:

    My mother had a doctor that she trusted and liked very mutch.About 3 years ago she kept geting infectsions in here stomic,she said she had an offul smelt when she went to urinate this is what she said to him for the last 7 times she went to see him and i was whit her when she told him this.I todl him he should send her for an M R I for her stumic,he said no it was quite coman for elderlies to get a little discharge at there age,finely he did send her,then after wen the repports came in he did cald my mom on the phone and told her she had CANCER and it had spread quite abite and then to find out she only had 6 mouths to a year to live.My MOTHER died eight mounts later {he to thaught he new my mom} Every time my mom went to see him he was always to bussy to just check her on the table.And now my mom is gone and i loved her so much. I just learning on my new comuter sorry about my spelling, and thankyou for reading this.

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