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(+) Dr. Baumann is Interim Chief, Department of Emergency Medicine, Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine; Professor, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts Phase IIII February 7-11, 2017 Targeted Communications for Effective Management Michael R. Baumann, MD, FACEP The ED is the topic and you’ve just been called to speak with the CEO and two board members, or a complaining department of medicine, or your physicians. Are you prepared? Can you tell a compelling story and persuade them? Can you read your audience and respond with flexibility to the situation at hand. This important presentation will teach you how to make important presentations by teaching skills and allow practice in several components of presentation / communication. Objectives: • Differentiate between effective and ineffective communications. • Create persuasive written communications, memos, letters. • Define the components of compelling oral presentations. • Respond to requests for “spontaneous” brief presentations (including media responses). • Develop brief formal presentations to convey an important concept. 2/11/2017 8:00 AM-11:45 AM SA-9 (+) No significant financial relationships to disclose. 1/3/17 ACEP ED Director’s Academy TARGETED AND EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION Michael R. Baumann, MD, FACEP Professor of Emergency Medicine Tufts University School of Medicine Chair, Dept of Emergency Medicine Maine Medical Center Basic Human Truisms • We are less rationale than we think • We are less insightful than we think • We are less reasonable then we think • We deserve less credit than we think • We should share the blame for problems more often than we think we should Endowment Effect Confirmation Bias • We value who we are, what we have, and what we • Without appropriate feedback, we believe everything contribute more • We don’t value the contributions made by others as much we are doing is right and good • This assures continuation of behaviors that may negatively impact good communication 1 1/3/17 YOU HAVE TO LEARN THE Importance of Communication RULES OF THE GAME. AND THEN YOU HAVE TO PLAY BETTER THAN ANYONE ELSE. -Albert Einstein • “The admitting physician wanted so much information it was driving me crazy!” • “That physician is very difficult to call on the phone.” • “I just wanted them to come see the patient.” 2 1/3/17 Emergency Physician Communication 101 • What do you mean the d-dimer came back at 5017? Effective Communication Skills: The Essentials • What does “communication” mean to you? • What are the essential communication skills? • They didn’t tell me they had a new diagnosis of colon cancer and • Completed a trip to Canada 2 weeks ago before starting chemo. The “Real World” Effective Communication EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION: USE A CHECKLIST • Takes hard work and time • We are often rushed • Think of the C’s when it’s your turn to speak • Clear • Concise • Concrete • Correct • Coherent • Complete • Courteous • Takes information – sometimes lots of it • Requires active listening • Requires clear and consistent messages • Uses all of your senses • Uses many of your motor groups • Every neuron is “in the game if you want to be great!” 3 1/3/17 EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION: CLEAR EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION: CLEAR(ER) ¢ Hi Dr. Rodgers, Dr. Elm who joined your group is a great asset. I’d like to talk more about her when you have time. ¢ Hi Dr. Rodgers, Dr. Elm who joined your group has been engaging our staff well, does admits in a timely manner and is quite knowledgeable. I’d like to talk about her doing a communication lecture for our staffs. • Yours, Dr. Jim • Yours, Dr. Jim ¢ You are Dr. Rodgers… ¢ You are Dr. Rodgers… EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION: CONCISE EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION: CONCRETE • This is not optional - Read this email in it's entirety and reply all (It only goes to Bev • Hi Dr. Rodgers, • I wanted to touch base with you about Dr. Elm who joined your group this past month. I really think she has been engaging our staff well, and she definitely does her admits in a timely manner. She literally shows up five minutes after she is paged and goes directly to the patient to start the work-up. I have also found she is quite knowledgeable and has taught our staff a whole host of subject matter. I’d like to talk about her doing a communication lecture for our staffs. and myself) as your electronic signature that you have read this. • • MMC has been cited for an EMTALA violation by CMS. As part of our plan of correction we are requiring all Emergency Services staff to review the hospital EMTALA policy . • • Every patient presenting, no matter what the complaint, must be offered a medical screening exam (MSE). A physician must accompany the Triage RN to conduct a MSE. Triage nursing assessment does not constitute an MSE • • Please review the MMC EMTALA policy at this link immediately upon receipt of this email: • http://policy.mmc.org/CMS/mmc/production/Site_Published/policyweb/SiteSearch.aspx? s=1&searchKeyword=EMTALA • • Please "reply all" upon receipt of this email to indicate that you have read and understand the enclosed information. If you have any questions or need further clarification, please let me know immediately. 4 1/3/17 EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION: (IN)COMPLETE EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION: COMPLETE • Hi All- • Hi AllThe chief medical officer will be at our 7am meeting to discuss professionalism. Please plan to attend. Please remember to come to tomorrow’s staff meeting. EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION: COURTEOUS EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION: COURTEOUS • …Asking my daughter about it is not entirely fair, as • Sarah dislikes confrontation and would be reluctant to she dislikes confrontation and would be reluctant to express her true feelings. I would like to meet with you and Mrs. Boffa to discuss how we might remedy this situation. Barriers to Effective Communication express her true feelings if asked at school. I would like to meet with you to discuss how we might facilitate a faster transition for Sarah. Barriers to Effective Communication • Choice of words • We hear about 50% of what is said • Timing of the message • We understand 50% of what we hear • Non-verbal cues • We believe 50% of what we understand • Power struggles • We remember 50% of what we believe • Ineffective message delivery • Lack of being candid • Lack of trust • Unclear message, delivered emotionally Walker, K, et. Al. Communication Basics LEADS curriculum, Kansas State Univ. 2002 5 1/3/17 Necessary Skills for Effective Communication • Facility with verbal communication • Sensitivity to nonverbal communication • Active / interactive listening Fight Or Flight = Violence or Silence • To enhance communication, must recognize in ourselves and others • A better option is to prevent or eliminate the conflict entirely • Resistance disappears if there is no counter resistance • Adrenaline takes time to dissipate once communication is re-established Vascular to osh vascular Communication: Understand yourself • 1. • 11. • 2. • 12. • 3. • 13. • 4. • 14. • 5. • 15. • 6. • 16. • 0 Not at all • 7. • 17. • 5 • 10 Sometimes The majority of time • 8. • 18. • 9. • 19. • 10. • 20. 2: I have put off returning phone calls or emails because I simply didn‘t want to deal with the person who sent them. • 0 • 5 • 10 Not at all Sometimes The majority of time 1: At times I avoid situations that might bring me into contact with people I’m having problems with. 3: Sometimes when people bring up a touchy or awkward issue I try to change the subject. • 0 • 5 • 10 Not at all Sometimes The majority of time 6 1/3/17 4: When it comes to dealing with awkward or stressful subjects, sometimes I hold back rather than give my full and candid opinion. 0 5 10 Not at all Sometimes The majority of time 6: When I’ve got something tough to bring up, sometimes I offer weak or insincere compliments to soften the blow. • 0 • 5 • 10 Not at all Sometimes The majority of time 8: If I seem to be losing control of a conversation, I might cut people off or change the subject in order to bring it back to where I think it should be. 0 5 10 Not at all Sometimes The majority of time 5: Rather than tell people exactly what I think, sometimes I rely on jokes, sarcasm, or snide remarks to let them know I’m frustrated. • 0 • 5 • 10 Not at all Sometimes The majority of time 7: I sometimes exaggerate my side of the argument to get my point across. • 0 • 5 Not at all Sometimes • 10 The majority of time 9: When others make points that seem stupid to me, I sometimes let them know it without holding back at all. 0 5 10 Not at all Sometimes The majority of time 7 1/3/17 10: When I’m stunned by a comment, sometimes I say things that others might take as forceful or attacking—terms such as “Give me a break!” or “That’s ridiculous!” 0 5 10 Not at all Sometimes The majority of time 12: If I really get into a heated discussion, I’ve been known to be tough on the other person. In fact, they might even feel a bit insulted or hurt. 0 5 10 Not at all Sometimes The majority of time 14: When things don’t go well, I’m more inclined to see the mistakes others made than notice my own role. 11: Sometimes when things get a bit heated I move from arguing against others’ points to saying things that might hurt them personally. 0 Not at all 5 10 Sometimes The majority of time 13: I get frustrated sometimes at how long it takes some groups to make decisions because too many people are involved. 0 Not at all 5 10 Sometimes The majority of time 15: When I find that I’m at cross purposes with someone, I often keep trying to win my way rather than looking for common ground. 0 Not at all 0 Not at all 5 10 Sometimes The majority of time 5 10 Sometimes The majority of time 8 1/3/17 16: I sometimes make absolute statements like “The fact is…” or “It’s obvious that…” to be sure my point gets across. 0 Not at all 5 10 Sometimes The majority of time 18: There are some people I’m rough on because, to be honest, they need or deserve what I give them. 0 5 10 17: At times I argue hard for my view hoping to keep others from bringing up opinions that would be a waste of energy to discuss anyway. 0 5 10 19: In the middle of a tough conversation, I often get so caught up in arguments that I don't see how I'm coming across to others. Not at all Sometimes The majority of time 20: When I’m discussing an important topic with others, sometimes I move from trying to make my point to trying to win the battle. Not at all Sometimes The majority of time 0 Not at all 5 10 Sometimes The majority of time • If your score is 0 - you may take a break for this section. • If your score is less than 20 you may now teach the 0 5 10 Not at all Sometimes The majority of time class. 9 1/3/17 SILENCE OR VIOLENCE SILENCE OR VIOLENCE • Personal examples • Personal examples • Violence >>> Silence • Violence >>> Silence Nsurg patronizing OSH hosps Hosps to peds pgy1 - violence Verbal Communication VERBAL COMMUNICATION • I already know how to talk… Effective Communication: Verbal Communication • What are the most important factors necessary to effectively communicate verbally? • What irritates you when it comes to verbal communication? 10 1/3/17 Effective Communication: Verbal Communication • Be honest • State your position openly • Speak carefully, but state what you think • If you disagree with someone, tell them, clearly and carefully • Avoid “some would argue” or “others think” • Use “I” statements focused on your thoughts • Take responsibility for your thoughts and opinions • Avoid “you” statements • “you think we should…” • “Some people feel” Effective Communication: Verbal Communication • Be clear and consistent • No should mean no, and yes should mean yes • If you change your mind, explain why you changed it • Do not say one thing to one person and another thing to another • Avoid sidebar conversations • RED FLAGS: • “Don’t repeat this, but…” • “I am only telling you…” Effective Communication: Verbal Communication Effective Communication: Verbal Communication • Speak clearly and at the appropriate volume • Too loud = controlling • Too soft = uncertainty • Solicit views and suggestions • Don’t control the discussion • Do not mumble, speak down or degrade • Do not act out those feelings • State your feelings • Do not whine or get weepy • Be validating, speak in the positive • Do not get pressured speech • Violates multiple communication rules • Do not react to others emotions • Attempt to understand why they are expressing them • Silence can be OK • Do not ramble, come to the point • Decide on specific follow-up actions and specific dates Effective Communication: Verbal Communication Verbal Communication : SBAR • Do not be rude or use foul language • Structured technique • Professional behavior is much more effective • Conveys a great deal of information • Do not burn bridges • Succinct and Brief • Do not say anything you will regret later • People don’t forget these things easily • Standardizes different communication styles that come from • Can you recall recent examples where you communicated in a way you regretted? • Gender • Background • Training • Profession 11 1/3/17 Verbal Communication : SBAR Verbal Communication : SBAR • SBAR communication is a model for clinical • Situation – What’s going on with the patient right communications now? • Method of communication with military origins • Identify yourself • Beginning to gain traction in healthcare • Identify the patient • Enhances safety by standardizing what is conveyed • State the problem concisely Verbal Communication : SBAR Verbal Communication : SBAR • Background – What’s the background? How did we get • Assessment – What do I think the issue is? Why am I to this point? concerned? • Review the chart • Provide your observations • Anticipate questions • Provide your evaluation of patient’s current state • State the relevant medical issues Verbal Communication : SBAR VERBAL COMMUNICATION • Recommendation – What should we do to respond to the situation? • Suggest what should be done to meet patient’s immediate needs • What is the most important skill you could develop for effective verbal communication? MMC ED to hosps - Please admit 12 1/3/17 ACTIVE LISTENING WHAT IS ACTIVE LISTENING?? • When was the last time you were speaking to someone and you wondered if they were still listening? Listening: A CRITICAL communication skill • You will need to know how to manage when • They are not listening to you • You are not listening to them • Studies show we remember ¼ to ½ of what we hear. SOMETIMES IT’S EASY TO TELL WHEN YOU ARE NOT ACTIVE LISTENING: • Looking at watch or smartphone • Deciding where to go for dinner • Texting • Wondering if I will finish early so you can workout 13 1/3/17 SOMETIMES IT’S HARD TO TELL WHEN YOU ARE NOT ACTIVE LISTENING: Effective / Active Listening • Thinking about what you are going to say next • Open minded • Forming counter arguments or rebuttals • Empathetic • Interrupting the speaker • Respond / be interested • Discussing a point with someone at your table • Pay attention to what is being said or inferred Effective / Active Listening Effective listening : LISTEN • Fight distractions • L – Look • Look at them , eye contact • Pay attention • Avoid side conversations in a group setting • Watch for non-verbal cues • Body language • Facial expression • Judge the content • Not the messenger or delivery • I – Inquire • Open probing questions, what, why, how, who • What do you mean when you say… • S – Summarize • Recap • What you are saying is… • Confirms you are trying to hear accurately EFFECTIVE LISTENING: LISTEN EFFECTIVE LISTENING: LISTEN • T – Take notes • Keeps focus • Mentally repeating their words also keeps focus • N – Neutralize your feelings • Stay objective, avoid bias • Listen to the message • E – Encourage • Smile and other open facial expressions • Nod occasionally • Use silence or small verbal cues to encourage them to say more • Don’t be distracted by how you feel toward the person • Don’t be distracted by their emotions • Yes, uh-huh, really • Open stance and arm positions 14 1/3/17 Active Listening: Paraphrase Active Listening: Paraphrase • Restate what the speaker has said • Allows you to fully comprehend • Demonstrates you have heard what they said • Allows speaker to hear their words from your perspective • Lets them know you are listening • Allows the speaker to clarify or correct • Paraphrase to assure you’re getting the right information • What I’m hearing is… • Sounds like you are saying… • I may not be understanding you correctly and I find myself taking what you said personally, so what I heard was… Active Listening examples Active Listening examples Active Listening : Summary Nonverbal Communication • Shows you value them • What is it? • Seek greater understanding of what they are trying to • What are some examples? say • Builds relationships • Learn invaluable points in the process • Benefits the speaker and the listener 15 1/3/17 Non verbal communication • Many studies show the non verbal cues communicate more • What you say is overpowered by how you act and appear • Why are you angry? E.g. Nonverbal communication Effective Nonverbal Communication • Posture • Actions • Tone of voice • Facial expression • Gestures • Use of space • Make eye contact • Conveys interest • Makes you look more trustworthy and sincere • Do not stare • Watch your body language • Open stance, arms at sides creates air of openness • Gestures should be open • Standing / sitting straight conveys alertness • Slouching in your chair minimizes communication Effective Nonverbal Communication Effective Nonverbal Communication • Watch your facial expressions • Smiling, nodding facilitate communication • Frowning, shaking your head can close the door on communication • Never “eye roll” • Things to avoid: • Hunch your shoulders • Fold your arms • Turn away from the person to whom you are talking • Point your finger at the other person • “I’d love to work Saturday” 16 1/3/17 Non Verbal Communication Non Verbal Communciation • Examples • Questions (NON) VERBAL COMMUNICATION : SUMMARY POINTS • Set the stage in meetings • Get everyone in on the agenda early • Keep focused on the goals • Get everyone on a common acceptable platform BEFORE getting to specifics • All patients get good care (NON) VERBAL COMMUNICATION : SUMMARY POINTS • Make sure you have complete info before speaking • I am not sure I have enough info to see how this will work… • Check assumptions at the door • Everyone makes assumptions (including you) • Clarify and paraphrase • I get the impression you feel this… • I think the problem lies here, but I sense you think differently… • Better reimbursement for the group (NON) VERBAL COMMUNICATION : SUMMARY POINTS (NON) VERBAL COMMUNICATION : SUMMARY POINTS • Inquire without advocating • Often spend too much time trying to convince others we are right rather than listening • It’s not personal 99% of the time • Try to understand their point of view • Ask yourself why a reasonable, rational person would say or act • Inquire • Explain to me the details of your idea • I don’t get it, can you try again… in that manner • Watch non verbal cues and mood 17 1/3/17 (NON) VERBAL COMMUNICATION : SUMMARY POINTS (NON) VERBAL COMMUNICATION : SUMMARY POINTS • It’s OK not to know everything • I don’t know • I want to make sure I understand what you are saying • Respond to emotions with inquiry, not silence or • You seem angry, so I feel we are not communicating violence • You seem upset, is everything alright? • I understand why you are frustrated… – paraphrase well • We don’t seem to be getting anywhere, can we agree on this… • I understand your point, what has worked in other instances… (NON) VERBAL COMMUNICATION WRITTEN COMMUNICATION EFFECTIVE WRITTEN COMMUNICATION Electronic mail • Email • 72 percent of Americans use the Internet • 88 percent of internet users use email • In business, these percentages are for all practical purposes 100 percent. • Letters • Announcements • Posters • 30 billion emails sent in 2004 • 97 billion emails sent in 2010 Worldwide Email Usage 2007-2011 Forecast: (IDC #206038) 18 1/3/17 EFFECTIVE EMAILS EFFECTIVE WRITTEN COMMUNICATION • All communication points previously discussed apply • Remember the 7 C’s • Non verbal cues are severely limited • Try and keep email communication to topics that are not controversial • Give an early warning of the subject • Subject line in email • First few sentences in a letter • Be respectful and concise • Edit and spell check all written communications • Misspellings can distract from your message • Spell checkers miss similar words EFFECTIVE EMAILS: BASIC TIPS EFFECTIVE EMAILS: BASIC TIPS • Subject line is the HEADLINE in a newspaper • Grabs your attention • Should know at a glance what the email is about • Repeat or weekly emails should have the date • Reply requested emails should have the respond date • Make a single point per email • Can reply to each within it’s time frame • Quick replies can be answered immediately if sent single • Related points can be combined • Consider putting them into separate or numbered paragraphs • Emails that are for info only can have multiple points • Again consider paragraphs • Friday notes example EFFECTIVE EMAILS: BASIC TIPS EFFECTIVE EMAILS: BASIC TIPS • Work emails should not be too informal • They last forever • They may be printed • They may be forwarded • Emails are never confidential • Think before you write • “Draft” controversial emails in word • Save as draft is second best option • Be a good email responder • Check email regularly • Acknowledge receipt if the response is delayed • Specify if you need a response • Include any call to action you desire • Be sure to include full contact info for them to respond • Often sent before ready • Don’t hit send if you have: • Any uneasiness about the message • Any anger about the message • Don’t use emails for discipline • Effective for task reminders: e.g. - complete your charts 19 1/3/17 EFFECTIVE EMAILS: BASIC TIPS Case Studies: Electronic Mail • Use BCC for emails to large groups • Rarely use “reply all” • Know the entire email thread before forwarding Case #1 Case #2 From a member of the ED staff to everyone else in the ED: From a member of the medical staff to you, copied to all of his partners: “…I can’t believe we are allowing this to happen… this is completely unacceptable… who is running this department anyway…?” Case #3 #1: From hospital administration: “I would like to publically congratulate Dr. _____ for accepting this position…” #2: A recipient of the note inadvertently hits “reply to all” with the following one-liner: “I can’t believe this moron got the job!!!” “…can’t you ER docs ever get this right? This is ridiculous… you guys have no idea what you are doing… I am tired of cleaning up your mess…” Case #4 Sent by one of your residents to the hospital President at 3:30 A.M.: “…Dear Administrator: … I can’t believe I am forced to drink this crappy coffee when I am on call! Why have you allowed this to go on for so long?… I have some suggestions for you… please let me know when this is fixed…!!!” 20 1/3/17 Mitigating others emails • Similar to voice communication • Know when to take it offline • “This seems important and it seems people have strong feelings. We will discuss at next faculty/staff meeting.” • “How about if we set up a group to explore the issue. Please send suggestions for members to ...” • Act decisively (quickly) Discussion? Effective email communication EXAMPLE : FRIDAY NOTES • Yes email: • See the new orderset to make it easier to order CTs. • Friday notes • Welcome Dr. X to the department • Attached is a lecture offering you may enjoy • Please see the attached email about the Maine ACEP • Characteristics • Immediately accepted • Not controversial meeting in Portland on Dec 7th and RSVP to Maureen • Reminder for attendings, the LLSA is scheduled immediately preceding the MEACEP meeting • Please remember to put a sticker on your airway QI forms Effective email communication Effective email communication • Not email: • Any message that is extremely important • Any message that is confidential • Any negotiation or back and forth conversation • Not email: • The hospital has a new policy of no moonlighting • The compensation program has been cut by 10% • The CME budget has been cut by 10% • The Overtime budget has been cut by 10% • Everyone has to do more shifts • The shifts are going to be 9 hours • Especially if you don’t know the person • Bad news, Criticism, Complaints • You need an immediate response • You don’t want a permanent record • Participants are nearby- benefit of nonverbal 21 1/3/17 NOT EMAIL : EXAMPLE FROM QUALITY OFFICER EFFECTIVE EMAIL: SUMMARY POINTS • Dear Dr Rogers, • Always read before you send • I know you have reported 100% compliance on OR checklists, but since you had a wrong side surgery recently, I sent students into the OR to observe and here are the results… • Never use email to pick/continue a fight • Sleep on the really hot ones • Less is more • If you need to be critical, try to start every note by pointing out something positive • Received the most scathing reply from the surgeon in chief he has ever received • Not in email, multiple other learning points EFFECTIVE EMAIL: SUMMARY POINTS EFFECTIVE EMAIL: SUMMARY POINTS TROUBLE WAITING TO HAPPEN • Do not overuse Reply to All Don’t send important emails when you are: • Assume everyone will see your note • Be careful with confidential information • Rushed or distracted • Do not send or forward emails containing • Pissed off inflammatory, offensive, racist or obscene remarks • NO Jokes, cartoons, pictures • DO NOT USE CAPITALS!! • Really tired • Have alcohol on board LETTERS LETTERS : EXAMPLE • Introduce yourself and your role I would like to thank you for taking the time to speak with me today regarding care you received on July 5, 1767. I truly apologize if you felt there was a lack of communication during your visit, and that you felt we did not meet your expectations. We take feedback very seriously and use it in working with staff to improve customer service. • Address the concerns/main issues • Remain respectful • Come to closure • Avoid requiring further communication if not intended Thank you again for speaking with me. Sincerely, 22 1/3/17 LETTERS : EXAMPLE • Dear You were seen in the Maine Medical Center Emergency Department on August 14, 2005. X-rays performed in the Emergency Department are routinely reviewed. Upon review of your CT there was another interpretation added to your chart. This finding may require follow-up with a physician. I would like to discuss this CT interpretation with you, but have been unable to reach you at the phone number you provided. Please call me at your earliest convenience so we can discuss your CT. If you have already received the CT interpretation and are seeing a physician, please call me to let me know you have received the information. Thank you for your time. EFFECTIVE FEEDBACK • Sincerely EFFECTIVE FEEDBACK • Sandwich technique • Recognize qualities and areas performed well • Deliver honest and sincere feedback • Close with review of good qualities you hope to see continue • Non verbal communication is key • Neutral facial expression and body language EFFECTIVE FEEDBACK • Location is important • As soon as reasonable • Make sure you have all of the data • Private location • Temperament is key • Angry or frustrated on either person’s part defeats this EFFECTIVE FEEDBACK : EXAMPLES • You are a wonderful advocate for your patients and they seem to really connect with you. • I have noticed your productivity is below the rest of the group. Perhaps we could come up with a few techniques where you could match the group productivity and still preserve your personal touch. • Remember to pick what’s important for feedback 23 1/3/17 EFFECTIVE FEEDBACK • Your point is completely valid and I appreciate you sharing it with me. • The outside auditors measure us on compliance to their standardized guidelines and it is very important that we adopt a standardized approach. • I think we should evaluate the evidence and if the standard approach has no reason not to adopt, we should follow it. Average RVU/shift_FY YTD cumulative 80 50 45 60 Eval Time v Mean LOS V Mean 40 40 35 20 30 25 0 20 -20 15 -40 10 5 -60 m -80 v D n Z b V c K x W l P z I j E k T h Q f C g R s M d Y a F i N p L o S u G t B y X r J e A q H w 0 Effective Feedback Avg Pt/shift Cumulative YTD Fy_blinded 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 S F N B Y R C T M L I K E H Q P W A Z J V D G 24 1/3/17 SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS: MEDIA SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS: MEDIA SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS: MEDIA • Understand their agenda • Reporters have a deadline • If you don’t respond they will ask the ED director across town • Prepare ahead of time • Most medical issues are seasonal, and repeat yearly • Can prepare, much like a lecture, and save for each year. • Know exactly what they are discussing and what their • Common topics in Maine • Heat Illness • Ozone • Cold Illness • Carbon Monoxide • Flu season take on the matter is • Especially important if called by the editor of a paper or the Op Ed (opinions) division • Not so important if talking on usual health issues • Don’t do any interviews without prep • If they show up unannounced, reschedule 25 1/3/17 SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS: MEDIA MEDIA GENERAL POINTS IN THE MOMENT • Broadcast media • Work on your key message • The average “sound bite” is currently 7 seconds • You don’t have long to get your point across • Stay focused • Hone it down to short, clear, direct phrases • Print media • Think through your response very carefully • Especially with opinion editors who may have an agenda they are trying to print that is different than you realize • Make it a “quotable quote” • Even if time is short, take a moment and come up with your sound bite • If you have the choice, choose a background that is good advertising (outside in front of hospital signage works well) SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS: MEDIA SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS: MEDIA • Dress well • Lean forward slightly toward the camera • Solid, dark colors • Look at the interviewer • A white coat may be appropriate • Keeps your eyes from wandering; looks shifty • Warm up your voice • Do not look directly at the camera • Speak with energy • Never shake your head “no” • A higher volume, range, tone and pitch than normal • Never frown SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS: MEDIA SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS: MEDIA • Plant your feet, and use slow, deliberate • Memorize your key points • Movements • No more than 3-5 • Keep your cool; stay calm • Write them down • Breathe • Try to keep referring to them in your interview • Don’t get flustered if you are peppered with questions • Never say “No comment” • Speak more slowly than your interviewer • To the audience, no comment = guilty • Avoid saying “I think” • Not sound-bite worthy 26 1/3/17 SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS: MEDIA MEDIA : SPEAKING POINTS EXAMPLES • Keep hydrated • Have 3-5 key messages: • Avoid caffeine, milk or alcohol • Try not to lick your lips • Visualize a great interview • Heck, it works for athletes… why not you? • Afterward, do a post-mortem • Review, evaluate and improve • Practice! • It’s important to always wear a helmet when riding a bike or motorcycle, skiing, or engaging in any activity that could result in a serious head injury. • You don’t have to be traveling fast, or fall far to experience a serious head injury. • Helmets should be worn by both children and adults. MEDIA : WORKING YOUR MESSAGE EXAMPLES • Question: In this age of increasing health care, is this the best use of hospital funds? MEDIA : WORKING YOUR MESSAGE EXAMPLES • Question: Why expand the Emergency Department? • Answer: The number one reason we’re expanding our • Answer: This is really about enhancing patient care … • Answer: The real story today is providing better patient Emergency Department is … • Answer: The community needs this for three reasons …. care …. • MEDIA : SPEAK IN POSITIVE PHRASES MEDIA : SPEAK IN POSITIVE PHRASES • Question: What did the X-rays show? • “I am not a crook” - Richard Nixon • What if he had said : • “I am an honest man” instead… • Incorrect • We didn’t have time to take a full set of X-rays. • Correct • We’ll take a full set of X-rays once we’re able to stabilize the patient. 27 1/3/17 MEDIA : SPEAK IN POSITIVE PHRASES MEDIA : SMALL, SIMPLE SOUND BITES • Question: The patient says Dr. Jones is a quack. • Incorrect • Dr. Jones is not a quack. • Correct • My experience is that Dr. Jones is a very good physician. “The Emergency Department is seeing a large number of patients with issues related to the heat, and this serves as a good reminder that when we have a heat wave people drink plenty of fluids, limit vigorous outdoors activities, and seek out an air conditioned place to cool off, especially if you’re elderly.” Remember the 7 second sound bite… http://www.wcsh6.com/video/3853414851001/1/MaineMedical-Center-put-Ebola-response-plan-to-the-test MEDIA : SMALL, SIMPLE SOUND BITES • Our Emergency Department is treating a significant number of patients for heat-related symptoms. Most are generally mild. • It’s important for people to drink plenty of fluids, avoid vigorous activities during the hottest part of the day, and seek out an air conditioned place to cool off. • The elderly are especially susceptible to heat-related issues, so they should be especially cautious. If you have elderly relatives or neighbors, remember to check in on them regularly. MEDIA : FOCUS ON YOUR MESSAGE • Q: Is the Emergency Department a high stress area? • Incorrect MEDIA : FOCUS ON YOUR MESSAGE • Do you have long waiting lines in the Emergency Department? • Incorrect • No, we don’t have long waits in our Emergency Department • Correct • As you would expect, patients with the most urgent conditions are treated first. Our goal is to see every patient as soon as possible. MEDIA : FOCUS ON YOUR MESSAGE • Q: We’re received reports that you were grossly understaffed last night. How many doctors were working? • Yes, the stress in the Emergency Department can be quite high. • Incorrect • Correct • There’s a lot that goes on in an Emergency Department, and our staff is trained to handle whatever comes our way, from a broken leg to a heart attack. • I don’t know that number. • Correct • I don’t have that information at my fingertips, but will get it for you. What I can tell you right now is that we had a greater than normal volume of patients due to … • Avoid “I don’t know” statements – they seem evasive 28 1/3/17 MEDIA : FOCUS ON YOUR MESSAGE • Q: Patient John Smith claims your staff misdiagnosed his condition? MEDIA : FOCUS ON YOUR MESSAGE • Don’t give them another story… • Incorrect • Incorrect • I’m not going to comment on that. • Correct • Because of patient privacy policies, I can’t speak about a specific patient or treatment, but we are aware of Mr. Smith’s concerns and are looking into the matter. MEDIA : WORD YOUR ANSWER TO STAND ALONE • We had a resident who had trouble intubating patients, so he spent some time practicing at our simulation center and is now proficient. • Correct • If a resident wants to sharpen his or her skills in a particular area, we have a simulation center that provides an opportunity to become proficient in skills ranging from suturing to diagnosing heartbeats . MEDIA: FINAL TIPS • Q: Do you recommend calling 9-1-1 whenever someone has chest pains? • Incorrect • Yes, they should call 9-1-1 immediately • Think high level • Big picture • Don’t worry about details • Correct • If someone is experiencing chest pains, they should call 9-1-1- immediately. Emergency Medicine Midlevels - Situation Emergency Medicine Midlevels - Background • Current staffing in ED unable to accommodate increasing • Volume changes and new programs have stressed demands for patient care in both volume and acuity as well as resident/student coverage. • Midlevel staffing designed without replacement factor once coverage for resident conferences built in. current abilities • Despite participation in multiple care management processes • Clinical decision unit opened “slow” with no additional provider staffing 29 1/3/17 ED volume February 2010- February 2012 ED Left without being seen February 2010- February 2012 4.0% 6150 3.5% 5950 3.0% 5750 2.5% 5550 Series1 2.0% 5350 1.5% 5150 1.0% 4950 0.5% 4750 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 1 24 ED Clinical Decision Unit Patients Drop Page Fields Here February 2010-February 2012 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Emergency Medicine Midlevels - Assessment CDU Patients by Month 140 Count of Encounter 120 100 80 Drop Series Fields Here Total 60 • Demand is increasing • Patient volume continues to climb • Patient acuity continues to climb • Observation patient volume showing third year growth • Walkout rate starting to rise • Safety issues - Coverage on Tuesday mornings for resident conference becoming inadequate with volume increases 40 20 2012-02 2012-01 2011-12 2011-11 2011-10 2011-09 2011-08 2011-07 2011-06 2011-05 2011-04 2011-03 2011-02 2011-01 2010-12 2010-11 2010-10 2010-09 2010-08 2010-07 2010-06 2010-05 2010-04 2010-03 0 YrMo Emergency Medicine Midlevels Recommendation Emergency Medicine Midlevels • Add 3.2 FTE as soon as hiring allows • Revise schedule to add 12 hours of coverage • Improves care for observation patients • Allows re-establishment of a fast track for minor emergencies (Huron recommendation) • Anticipated outcomes • Reduce Left Without Being Seen rate significantly with fast track • Reduce door to provider times for all patients • Fast track will improve bed availability • Reduce patient complaints related to ED wait • Increase provider and patient satisfaction by decreasing interruptions during patient encounters • Provide safer coverage for current patient volume and acuity 30 1/3/17 SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS : DISRUPTIVE PHYSICIAN Questions • Review proforma provided by Finance • Questions? SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS : DISRUPTIVE PHYSICIAN • Upon exiting the room she thanks the physician for waiting. • He looks her in the eye and quietly says… ?? Which approach would you take at this point? A. Do nothing? Well &$@# you! • The following day the case makes it to your desk by 6:45 A.M. B. Confront him directly C. Report him to his Chief? D. Report him to the VPMA? E. Report him to HR? SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS : DISRUPTIVE PHYSICIAN The Disruptive Physician • More common than you might think • Essential to address immediately • Inaction virtually assures a replay Gawande A. When Good Doctors Go Bad. The New Yorker. August 7, 2000; 60-69. Do you have a Disruptive Physician Policy? JJ I can’t hold 31 1/3/17 SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS TARGETED COMMUNICATIONS: SUMMARY • 99% of the time it isn’t personal • Do your homework • Know your issues – better than anyone else • Study • Listen… actively TARGETED COMMUNICATIONS: SUMMARY TARGETED COMMUNICATIONS: SUMMARY • Get experts to brief you and guide you on what you • Show up on time… or even a little Early • Don’t think you know everything • Don’t act like you know everything • Don’t be afraid to ask questions • Be comfortable with what you don’t know don’t know • Don’t forget your internal experts – if going to an ultrasound meeting • Bring the US champion • Never burn a bridge if you can avoid it • Keep your friends close and your enemies closer • Reputations follow us throughout our lives, so how you treat others will be remembered TARGETED COMMUNICATIONS • Thank you for your attention!! • Contact Info: Michael Baumann, MD Department of Emergency Medicine Maine Medical Center 22 Bramhall St Portland, ME 04102 207-662-7010 [email protected] 32 1/3/17 CASE A CASE B • The ED is full. • You get a call from the medical director of • Patients are in hallway beds. • There is a 2 hour wait to be seen. • You get a call from one of the hospitalists who is managing an elderly patient with HTN on the floor. The patient develops epistaxis and there is no equipment on the floor. “Can I bring the patient to the ED real quick?” inpatient psychiatry, who is in your ED with another psychiatrist Dr Y who is a patient. • Dr. Y has an extremely painful condition and he asks you to help because they haven’t been seen yet. • They acknowledge the ED is busy, but mention if they approached the current ED attending “that guy wouldn’t do anything they asked.” CASE C • The ED attending from the prior case approaches you and asks why you are seeing patients? • You describe the scenario and he goes on to tell you angrily he hates “VIP medicine” because they subvert our systems and things get missed. CASE E You are working the night shift and the ED is packed with patients. A nurse reminds you [for the third time] that the patient with acute renal colic in Room 17 is in pain again and needs more pain medicine. Your curt response… “I’ll get to it!” is just a couple of octaves louder than usual and she frowns ever so slightly. CASE F CASE G You are working the night shift and the ED is packed with patients. Dr. Baumann, one of your ‘less speedy’ interns walks in to the nursing station to join the team for the night. One of the staff mumbles… “Oh no, it’s going to be a long night again!” just loud enough for everyone to hear. You are working the night shift and the ED is packed with patients. The paramedics bring in a well-known alcoholic sprawled out on the stretcher. One of your over tired residents publicly laments… “Hey look… another drunk dirt bag for us to take care of!” Most of the staff chuckle in approval. 33 1/3/17 CASE H During your first few months on the job as a ED attending you inadvertently become a “spectator” of a case one of your partners is managing. He makes a few clinical decisions that really surprise you and the patient has an important complication as a result. Being brand new to the practice, you are not quite sure what to do… CASE STUDY (I): SMARTER THAN THOU • Patients are often referred to your dept for studies after being seen by their physician or an outside facility. • You announce at dept meeting that there are “too many instances of smarter than thou” or “second guessing” behavior • A respected physician exclaims “so we are supposed to do every test the outside physician thinks” CASE J CASE K • For years your faculty has been paid a fixed salary with In the face of escalating ED length of stay a group of your nurses propose that a new set of Triage Protocols be adopted. These dictate triage nurse-driven test and treatment orders for patients with: yearly 2% adjustments • In the past salary was not linked to either clinical or academic performance • A hospital wide initiative will soon mandate that all physicians adopt performance-based compensation strategies • As a new Chief, you see pros and cons… • Chest pain • Abdominal pain • Acute painful conditions • A host of other diagnoses… CASE L • The neurosurgeons are refusing to admit any cases that are non-operative • Old patient with small subdural • Intraparenchymal bleed with seizure • The hospitalists are refusing to admit these cases because they are busy • The patient is in the ED 34