"Won't You Be My Doctor?": Four Keys to a Satisfying Relationship in an Increasingly Virtual World
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Despite rapid technological advances in healthcare, medicine is still largely practiced in a doctor's office This reality is changing rapidly during the COVID-19 pandemic as face-to-face conversations with primary care practitioners are being replaced by virtual visits conducted by phone or video conferencing. Communication challenges in patient-practitioner relationships exist in face-to-face visits and they are accentuated in virtual ones. Absent a physical examination and other sensory data, conversation is the primary means by which safe, satisfying care depends. We present 4 steps to help patients and practitioners work together to obtain optimal results from virtual or face-to-face visits, summarized by the acronym PREP: repare, ehearse, ngage, and ersist. Based on 80 years of combined clinical practice and research, we recommend strategies to help bridge the gap between what patients want and deserve in their medical visits and practitioners' understanding of their patients' concerns.
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