USA TODAY International Edition

Crying in exam room reveals health care’s problems

Doctor- patient bond is lost in push for efficiency

- Christine Bechtel Christine Bechtel, a former member of the Department of Health and Human Services’ Health IT Policy Committee, is co- creator of 3rd Conversati­on.

I had never cried in a doctor’s office. But there I was, a few weeks back, sobbing in the exam room.

As a new resident of Fort Myers, Florida, I was trying to establish a relationsh­ip with a local primary care physician. From the start, the doctor’s focus was her computer, not me. She stared at a screen, while I stared off into space.

She challenged me on why I had an inhaler prescribed by a previous doctor. I explained that hay fever leaves me short of breath. But her screen said I needed an asthma diagnosis, which I don’t have. Then she asked why my blood pressure was so high – a first for me. Bewildered, I said I had ended a lifelong friendship the night before. Sidetracke­d again: It turns out there is no software code for that.

I needed a dose of kindness and some clinical insight. I got clicking and keystrokes instead.

The tears flowed soon after. All I wanted was a human connection, but the doctor- patient relationsh­ip – the most important element in all of health care – was dead on arrival.

To be clear, the doctor is a victim as much as I am. In 20- plus years as a patient advocate and policy wonk, I’ve seen how electronic records chain doctors to keyboards, how independen­t primary care doctors are disappeari­ng, and how financial incentives in government billing leave doctors with less time to spend with patients. There’s plenty of focus on each of these issues, and many others. Yet there’s not nearly enough emphasis on the larger crisis they’ve created. The doctor- patient relationsh­ip is collapsing.

The breakdown of relationsh­ips is bringing health care to the breaking point. In conversati­ons with hundreds of health profession­als, I’ve heard that it’s all but impossible to develop the kind of genuine relationsh­ips that facilitate better health for patients and higher profession­al satisfacti­on for doctors.

No wonder half of doctors and nurses are burned out. No wonder they are leaving health care in droves. And no wonder about half of Americans say health care is getting worse.

Human and financial costs

The pandemic didn’t help at all, thanks to virtual visits, masks that hide smiles and the politiciza­tion of medical treatment that introduced distrust into the doctor- patient relationsh­ip.

The lack of connection like I experience­d is costly in both human and financial terms. Studies show that a strong doctor- patient relationsh­ip improves patient health outcomes. Evidence also shows that a continuous bond between a patient and primary doctor reduces costs. Without it, patients will go anywhere for care, regardless of quality or cost. They go to pharmacies, urgent care and emergency rooms, instead of coordinati­ng with a single physician. The result is as well documented as it is painful: higher costs and poorer health.

There is an urgent need to restore relationsh­ips to the heart of health care. Patient well- being, physician fulfillment and health care spending depend on it.

Long- term reforms depend on policymake­rs and health profession­als, but in the short run, there are important steps that each of us can take.

To start, patients can connect with their health providers on a more personal level. After all, the doctor- patient relationsh­ip is a two- way street.

Remember when we all banged pots and pans in the pandemic to honor our health care heroes? We should do something similar, if quieter. Honestly, I could have done a better job at my recent appointmen­t. A couple of personal questions would have gone a long way.

Doctors can rethink their workflow and leverage team members to reduce the time spent on documentat­ion. That will free up time to develop more meaningful relationsh­ips with patients. While the system too often stands in the way, it’s time we fight back, one conversati­on at a time.

Time for relationsh­ip building

Patients and doctors also can come together to ask hospital or doctor’s office administra­tors to ease off the relentless push for efficiency and create more time for relationsh­ip building. I’ve seen a united front achieve success many times, including recently in Rochester, New York, and Jackson, Mississipp­i. Heartfelt conversati­ons led to less physician burnout and better patient experience­s, while inspiring hospital administra­tors to prioritize the bonds at the heart of health care.

Health care needs an infusion of relationsh­ips, for the benefit of everyone in health care and society as a whole.

I’m not the only one who has had a horrible experience at the doctor’s office, and the doctor I saw isn’t the only one who’s unhappy. We’re drifting apart, but if we work together, we can start to heal our increasing­ly sick health care system.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Many patients and medical profession­als alike say health care needs fixing.
GETTY IMAGES Many patients and medical profession­als alike say health care needs fixing.
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