TABLE 3.
Issue | Techniques/strategies to address the issue |
---|---|
Tension around patient autonomy and surrogacy |
Elicit patient communication, informational, and decision‐making preferences early (including who should be with them to receive information) and document their preferences in the medical chart to inform other health‐care providers.
Explore who the important people are in the patient's life/care so that you can include the right people in any life‐changing decisions. Do not assume a particular family structure, and remember that a patient's informal/unpaid family caregiver may be different from their surrogate decision‐maker (i.e., health‐care proxy).
Who can you ask for help in complicated cases?
|
Communication between language‐discordant patients and physicians |
Offer the use of a trained medical interpreter during clinical visits.
Pre‐meet with interpreters to brief them about the planned content of a patient/family meeting, particularly when sharing serious news, to discuss interpretation approaches and clarify topics/terminology that will be discussed during the meeting.
|
Mismatch in patient/family and team prognostic expectations |
Ask:
Tell:
Ask:
|
Patient/family share importance of religion/spirituality |
First, try not to dismiss the important role that spirituality/religion may play for patients/families, especially at the end‐of‐life. Affirm and meet the patient/family where they are with statements like:
Who can you ask for help?
|
Patient/family name racism in the encounter |
Ask open‐ended questions like:
Avoid terminating statements like “you will get through this” that may discourage people from bringing up their concerns. Conduct meeting with an interdisciplinary team whenever possible. Ask permission to involve others if appropriate:
|