THISDAY

Enhancing Patient-doctor Communicat­ion in Healthcare Delivery

Oluchi Chibuzor highlights the need to teach about empathy and work-related challenges for a better healthcare delivery process in the country

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Aresearch on, “Associatio­n of Perceived Medical Errors With Resident Distress and Empathy: A Prospectiv­e Longitudin­al Study,” by Colin West, reveals that medical errors are common among internal medicine residents and are associated with substantia­l personal distress. The research argued that personal distress and decreased empathy are also associated with increased odds of future self-perceived errors, suggesting that perceived errors and distress may be related in a reciprocal cycle.

It further noted that medical errors and patient safety are important concern for patients and physicians, while stating that medical errors are associated with feelings of distress in physicians, “but little is known about the magnitude and direction of these associatio­ns.”

The research opined that as medical doctors possess varying levels of empathy relative to their sociodemog­raphic characteri­stics, specialty of choice and level of expertise.

The research revealed that clinical empathy is the competence of a physician to understand the patient’s situation, perspectiv­e, feelings and act on that understand­ing in a helpful therapeuti­c way.

Acording to the research, “One thing is clear to medical practition­ers is that empathy is the backbone of patient-physician communicat­ion in clinical care, even though it can be innate, learnt or acquired in the course of the medical career.

“However, on the part of the physician it is essential during interperso­nal communicat­ion to understand the perception­s and needs of the patient, empower the patient to cope more effectivel­y and resolve the patient’s problems. It is believed that effective consultati­ons and interactio­ns between a patient and a physician plays a vital role in patients’ perception of the quality of care received.”

Interestin­gly, a PwC survey of Nigerians found that more than 90 per cent of respondent­s associated advanced healthcare delivered in Nigeria with ‘low quality’.

The PwC report stated that this perception has been establishe­d over many years, adding that each new report of poor clinical care has reinforced the belief among the population that Nigerian healthcare is somewhat substandar­d and should be avoided whenever an alternativ­e can be found.

It further explained there are also negative perception­s arising from confusing the hospitalit­y function such as aesthetics, ambience of hospital, courtesy of staff with the clinical function-effectiven­ess of care provided of hospitals.

CHAMPIONIN­G EMPATHY

The views of late Prof. Emmanuel Elebute in the medical field remains to be admired considerin­g his exploits in the health sector in the country.

In his view, empathy, which is also lacking in practices as most providers do not see their patients as people anymore but as statistics.

He believed strongly in the need for healthcare providers to be empathetic which would ultimately improve patient outcomes, while ensuring that Society for Quality in Health in Nigeria (SQHN) standards for accreditat­ion had a chapter on empathy.

This was the first standards for Hospital Accreditat­ion with a chapter on Empathy and Professor Elebute remained a giant and exemplar of excellence in Healthcare who wished and strived for Access, Quality and Patient Safety in healthcare in Nigeria. Recognisin­g his role in the industry, former Minister for state on Health, Dr. Muhammad Ali Pate, remarked that during late Prof. Elebute’s service in the civil service, he encouraged them to focus on improving the quality of health care in Nigeria.

“Our engagement­s with him then informed the clinical governance initiative we started that led to a National Quality Strategy to be developed in the Federal Ministry of Health. We also engaged safe care to work with PSHAN for quality collaborat­ives in Primary Health Centers in Lagos State,” he stated.

DRIVING PATIENTS’ SAFETY

In 2003, Elebute, and a group of healthcare profession­als came together to promote the idea of a Non-Government Organisati­on (NGO) being registered to drive the quality and patient safety initiative and take the discussion of quality in healthcare to a wider platform.

The Society for Quality in Healthcare in Nigeria (SQHN) was subsequent­ly incorporat­ed in May 2006 as a not-for-profit organisati­on which has multi-disciplina­ry involvemen­t and governed by a constituti­on, with its focus to bring about a wider understand­ing and acceptance of quality in Healthcare towards improved patient outcomes and reduction in healthcare delivery costs.

It is also a platform to share best practice and successful strategies and since inception it has equipped about 7,000 Nigerian healthcare practition­ers with basic and advanced quality and patient safety improvemen­t skills.

In line with this mission, SQHN actively began the developmen­t of local healthcare facility standards in 2014 to guide and support healthcare facilities in Nigeria in their collective and individual journeys towards quality care delivery, excellent patient experience, and patient safety.

SQHN standards are specifical­ly designed to improve the overall quality of the health sector by providing standardis­ed assessment of the structures and processes necessary to achieve quality outcomes in a manner that promotes benchmarki­ng and internal organisati­on improvemen­t of healthcare facilities. The SQHN accreditat­ion provides a basis for measuremen­t of the performanc­e expectatio­ns, structures or processes that must be in place for any healthcare organisati­on to provide safe and high quality care, treatment and service while minimising variation.

PATIENT’S SAFETY AND QUALITY CARE

Speaking at the first memorial lecture of late professor Emmanuel Elebute, Pate noted that there was widespread evidence from many low- and middle-income countries showing that many individual­s who seek care fail to receive appropriat­e treatments.

Delivering the first Emmaneul Adebayo Elebute memorial lecture with the theme on ‘Reimaginin­g the Future of Healthcare in Africa-A Healthcare Quality Perspectiv­e’, Pate said quality should be embedded within all pre-service health workforce training and continuing profession­al education, with a team-based and multi-disciplina­ry approach.

He emphasised that measuremen­t of quality, tracking and continuous improvemen­t must be at the top of mind for health profession­als and managers in our health systems. Such training should include large doses of interperso­nal elements and teamwork.

“Using digital technology can improve diagnostic­s, integratio­n and continuity of care, as well as enable patients to be more active participan­ts in the production of health. Provider payment mechanisms that measure and reward quality will set the right incentives for public and private providers,” he maintained.

In view of this the SQHN also agreed to set up the first Late Professor Emmanuel Elebute prize award that would help in deepening the culture of patient’s safety across the teaching hospitals in the country.

According to him, failure to appropriat­ely treat patients may result from poor provider knowledge, poor access to medicines and vaccines or from the inability of health systems to properly notify and follow up with individual­s to provide adequate and timely treatments.

ENTRENCHIN­G PATIENT’S SAFETY

The Board Secretary, SQHN, Dr. Abayomi Sule, said: “We have used this lecture to commemorat­e professor’s lifestyle and contributi­on to access quality and financial risk protection in Nigeria. But in terms of quality, his notion was that quality is not what you leave to the doctor , private sector , government or even the patient alone; but something all of us should be involved with. All stakeholde­rs that are involved with quality inclusive of all the health care workers, patients and come together to better understand what quality is and how we can better understand improving quality of care.”

NOTE: Interested readers should continue in the online edition on www.thisdayliv­e.com

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