The word doctor is derived from the Latin word, docere, which means 'to teach', and teaching patients is something all doctors think they are good at! Most feel their bedside manners and communication skills are impeccable because illusory superiority is a cognitive bias which afflicts since they are not immune to the Lake Wobegon effect (named after Garrison Keillor's fictional wnto where 'all the children are above average'). Communication, however, is a two-way street, and sadly, most patients do not think that doctors are
good teachers. All patients want detailed information regarding their ailments and many feel that their doctors do not bother devoting enough time explaining their problems to them. Additionally, many patients observe that when doctors do explain, they use complicated medical jargon that is beyond their understanding. Patients also feel that sometimes their doctors seem too busy and unapproachable, so they hesitate in asking too many questions.
If doctors are indeed smart and know that patients want more information about their illnesses, then why don't doctors routinely prescribe Information Therapy? There is no conspiracy of silence here! The sad truth is that most doctors simply do not understand the importance of Information Therapy. It is not that doctors enjoy keeping their patients in the dark, so they can extract money from them. Most doctors are happy to share information with their patients, and educating them will not turn them into medical professionals. Patients will still need to come to their doctor to get the treatment they need. The core problem is that educating patients is still not a top priority for doctors. They have a completely different worldview. Since they are doctors and know a lot about medicine, they sometimes assume that their patients are equally well-informed, which of course is not the case. Many will use jargon without even realizing that it is going above the patient's head. 'Medicalese' has become their primary language!
Doctors suffer from the 'curse of knowledge', just like all of us. We know what we know, and we know it so well that we assume that everyone else knows it just as well as we do. This is why doctors sometimes overestimate the ability of their patients to understand what they are talking about - they naively believe that if they know all these medical terms, their patients will too. Moreover, the primary focus for most doctors is providing quality clinical care. Sometimes, they are so busy doing this that they just don't have time to educate their patients. There is no question that doctors are busy people, and they will always remain busy. However, if doctors can use tools that make it easy to for them to prescribe Information
Therapy without disrupting their workflow, they will be happy to do so.
The trick is to make the patient do the work, using the self- service model supermarkets do, versus the old fashioned kirana shop! In the kirana store, all products are fetched by an assistant from shelves while customers wait in front of the counter and indicate the items they want. This is a very labour- intensive and therefore also quite expensive. The shopping process is slow, since the number of customers who can be attended to at one time is limited by the number of staff employed in the store. Supermarkets, on the other hand, make customers select their own goods and cart them to the front of the store to pay for them, so that they can service a much larger number of customers by making them do most of the work! Similarly, Information Therapy tools allow patients to serve themselves, so their doctor's precious time can be used for more productive and empathetic patient interaction.
What can we do to persuade doctors to prescribe Information Therapy routinely?
Doctors must be provided with access to a wide variety of inexpensive, easy-to-use tools, so that they can easily prescribe Information Therapy.Different doctors have different working styles and their patients have different learning needs. It is possible to use technology cleverly and efficiently, so that we can cater to these diverse requirements by using a combination of text, audio and video, which can be tailored to the individual patient's and doctor's needs. Sadly, many doctors are still unaware of the wide variety of tools that are already available for educating patients; this is why they still don't make effective use of them. Perhaps, some technology therapy needs to be prescribed to doctors first so that they are well- equipped to dispense Information Therapy to their patients!
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