factors related to using and misusing health services
4
Perceiving symptoms
2 ways of perciving symptoms
Individual Differences in the extent to which they attend to their state
* Eg: lv awareness, sensitivity
* Doesn’t mean their more accurate (could overestimate symptoms)
Environmental and social factors
* Environmental: other people reporting symptoms
* Psychological: expectations, negative emotions
Interpreting symptoms
2 ways of perciving symptoms
Prior Experiences
* Can help or hinder people’s interpretations of symptoms
Common Sense Model of illness
* Illness identity (name, symptoms).
* Causes and underlying pathology.
* Timeline or prognosis.
* Consequences (seriousness, effects, outcome).
lay referral network:
definition & examples
Getting advice from others before deciding to seek medical attention
* Symptom interpretation
* Advice about seeking care
* Recommended remedy
* Recommend talking to someone else
Going online
3 influsences of going online
The worried well
* People who are unnecessarily anxious about their health in the absence of a related diagnosis.
* Misuse health services
Self diagnose
* Using health related information online
Doctor TV shows:
* ⅓ -½ of the recommendations made were based on good science
sociocultural factors in using health services
4
who has more difficulties in acessing health care
Misgendering in health services
Low SES & immigrants in health services
Longer wait times in hospitals
Being indigenous in health services
3 problems
Language & culture as key barriers
- Canada’s health care system poorly equipped for addressing and accommodating the unique cultural needs of Indigenous people.
- Practitioners are also poorly educated on the social and economic determinants of Indigenous peoples’ health.
Lacking transportation & childcare services & service in area
Racism, discrimination, stigma
Stigma in health services
Disabilities in health services
Health is a Human Right
patient-centred communication
definition and what does it give us
= Care providers try to see the problem and treatment as the patient does (empathy), and in so doing enlist the patient’s cooperation
role of empathy in provider burnout
2
Compassion Fatigue
- Emotional exhaustion due to frequent/difficult patients.
burnout
Burnout
definition & 3 main components involved
Condition that results from chronic work strain
1. Emotional Exhaustion
2. Depersonalization
3. Low Sense of Personal Accomplishment
adherence/compliance
Definition & Avg adherance rate & what is adherance seen the least in
is empathy bad?
no. Negative correlation between empathy & burnout
what is the right kind of empathy
Name & defintion
Clinical empathy:
- Understanding inner experiences & perspectives of the patient as separate individual & communicating this to them
How to enhance patient adherence
Make it SIMPLE
Simplify regimen.
Impart knowledge.
Modify patient beliefs.
Patient communication.
Leave the bias.
Evaluate adherence.
key psychosocial factors in the hospital setting
4
how can being hospitalized have negative aspects
What are the types of coping in hospital settings
2 & the different types
Problem-focused coping:
- When patients believe they can do something about the problem
Emotion-focused coping:
- When patience perceive no control
- Blame Common, Associated with poor adjustment than self-blame
- Helplessness Due to low control. Affecting future perceptions of situations that can be controlled
- Denial, rumination, catastrophizing
How could different ways of preparing patients for procedure help
how & different types of control
Behavioural control:
* Reduce discomfort/promote recovery during/after the medical procedure
* Actions: special breathing/coughing exercises
Cognitive control:
- Knowing how to focus on benefits of medical procedure rather than unpleasant
Informational control:
- Gaining knowledge about event/sensation/what to expect