Sunday, February 15, 2009

Patient Portraits

One of the great freedoms that comes with age is the understanding that I am different than you. Just because I respond to a situation in one way does not mean you will have the same reaction. We are all bound by the commonality that is our humanness but, at the same time, I often find myself in a state of awe at just how unpredictable and mysterious my fellow man/woman really is.

Whether it is a religious belief, a work ethic or the technique used to squeeze the toothpaste tube, we live in a world with endless choices and opinions. When we hold a narrow view which includes only that we which believe to be true, we find ourselves in a place of judgment, frustration and conflict. When we expand our view to allow ours to co-exist with those around us, we find ourselves in a place of fascination, expansion and compassion. It took me a long time to understand that when I welcome your foreign perspective, it does not then cancel my own. I can both live by my truth and respect yours.

While this applies to life as a whole, it also specifically applies to life as a patient. There is an unspoken criterion for what makes a "good patient" and those outside that criteria may find themselves being judged for not measuring up. A good patient is compliant, happy, agreeable, motivated, respectful and grateful. On several occasions, I have been asked by both healthcare professionals and family members how to make a patient fit these criteria. They wanted tips on how to inspire or shame a person out of anger, fear or self-pity. While I agree that those states are not optimal for recovery, they are a part of healing from the inside out. You can not feel gratitude until you have allowed yourself to feel self-pity. There are no shortcuts.

In addition, there are many ways to be a patient. The "good patient" shoe will not fit on every foot. To see all patients as capable of behaving this way is to see those who don't as failures or, a more popular term, as victims. I won't lie and say I don't get frustrated when I see patients who are locked in their own prison, victimized by their illness. It seems like it shouldn't have to be that way but who am I to say what your experience should be? Likewise, who is my nurse or my doctor to tell me how I should or should not be reacting to anything?

Truth be told, healthcare moves at the speed of light and few professionals have the time to uncover the motives, feelings or needs of anyone acting like a "victim." These patients slow down the process, make the job of caregiving harder, and therefore these are the people who are judged, written off or just misunderstood. Perhaps if we all stop seeing healthcare through our own eyes, we can take a moment to look at the different ways people react to and move through illness. Perhaps by doing this we can have more patience, more compassion and have more to offer.

Patients come in all shapes and sizes, ethnic and socio-economic backgrounds and pre-existing personalities. Just for fun, I have drawn some patient portraits with my words to match my observations over the years. It is my hope that this will generate some thought on just how different we all are and how we can be treated accordingly. Despite wearing the same paper gowns, we all react to the crisis of illness in our own, unique way.

Because at the bottom of any illness scenario is the feeling of being out of control, I have focused on how different individuals seek comfort within the unpredictable world of illness.

The Compliance King or Queen
Finding Comfort: This patient finds comfort in doing everything they can to have control over the illness.

Becoming Empowered: This patient feels most empowered when they have a skill set, rules to follow or schedules to maintain that, when implemented, will result in better health.

The Draw Back: This is an ideal patient, medically, but runs the risk of becoming neurotic about missing a dose of medicine etc.

Caring for The Compliance King or Queen: This patient will have a hard time when there is nothing else that can be done medically and may be better served having tasks and goals to give the illusion of control no matter what.

The Sensitive Patient
Finding Comfort: For the Sensitive Patient, life revolves around relationships and the relationship between themselves, their loved ones and the healthcare professionals is paramount in their care. More than anything, the Sensitive Patient finds comfort in having family and friends close by to encourage maximum healing.

Becoming Empowered: Empowerment for The Sensitive Patient may come from those around them affirming the need to have the patient get well and be in their life. Sometimes, The Sensitive Patient finds it easier to be motivated by others' needs than their own desires.

The Draw Back: These patients have a hard time being taken care of because they are most comfortable being the in the caregiving role themselves.

Caring for The Sensitive Patient: This patient has a tender heart and will be troubled seeing the pain and worry in the eyes of those they love. It is important for those caring for them to remind them often that the caregivers are getting something out of it, like a sense of closeness or service.

The Potentially Proactive Patient
Finding Comfort: This patient finds comfort in external validation. This can be difficult to come by in a healthcare setting. This patient will find the most comfort when they discover their own power, perhaps as an advocate for themselves or a mentor for other patients.

Becoming Empowered: For this patient, the feeling of worthlessness can be devastating. It is essential to guide this patient to finding a way to be empowered within this role of patient.

The Draw Back: This patient can become angry and non-compliant if they feel they are not being treated as a competent person. They hold the potential to rebel to prove a point, which can be detrimental to their health and healing.

Caring for The Potentially Proactive Patient: Healthcare professionals will find treating this patient as a peer will inspire a greater sense of responsibility and therefore a greater motivation to be proactive in their own care. Most important, this patient must find ways to feel valuable within their illness circumstances.

The Alternative Patient
Finding Comfort: This patient finds comfort in going outside of the norms and looking for their own solutions to healthcare problems. This may include seeking supplemental alternative therapy, a spiritual approach to healing or creating their own healthcare game plan.

Becoming Empowered: This patient feels most empowered when they are not conforming to the traditional health plan but instead, finding new and progressive alternatives.

The Draw Back: These patients run the risk of going so far outside the norm that they miss out on the benefits of common medical practices.

Caring for The Alternative Patient: As a caregivers, it is best to encourage a integrative healthcare approach which will allow for maximum treatment options while satisfying this patient's needs for new ideas.

The Analytical Patient
Finding Comfort: This patient finds comfort in the pursuit and mastery of pertinent medical knowledge.


Becoming Empowered: This patient will be the one who earns an honorary medical degree through exhaustive research on whatever health issue they are facing. This patient finds empowerment through satiating their desire to posses as much knowledge as those treating them.


The Draw Back: This patient holds the potential to be blinded by their own studies and not rely on the real life experience of those treating them.


Caring for The Analytical Patient: The Analytical Patient may question diagnoses, make their own treatment recommendations or seek new healthcare professionals practicing with the most state of the art philosophies and techniques. This patient is best served when regarded as a consultant in their own care; they will respond best when their research and analysis are carefully considered by the healthcare team.


The Wide-Eyed Patient
Finding Comfort: The Wide-Eyed Patient finds comfort in observing, asking about and participating in the healthcare activities around them. Unlike the Analytical Patient, this is not an academic endeavor but rather one in which they find joy in new experiences, even in the midst of illness.


Becoming Empowered: This patient may ask to watch the screen during a bronchoscopy or to push their own IV medications through the line. It is through this exploration of the world around them that they feel most empowered.


The Draw Back: This patient has fears and worries just like all other patients but may mask that with their curiosity in the world around them.


Caring for The Wide-eyed Patient: It is important to indulge this patient's curiosity as much as possible but to not let it completely hide the need for emotional support when the "fun" is over.


The Bossy Patient
Finding Comfort: This patient is easy to spot. They find comfort in controlling their environment and the people in it.


Becoming Empowered: This patient often sees themselves as an authority on many things and might make strong assertions based on little factual evidence. They require being informed in detail about the options and issues at hand. The Bossy Patient feels most empowered when, after gathering enough information, they feel they are "calling the shots."


The Draw Back: This patient can become consumed with their own anxieties to the point that they do not notice the discomfort they are causing family, friends or professionals with their demands.


Caring for The Bossy Patient: The Bossy Patient is often loud and holds the potential for emotional outbursts. It is best when treating The Bossy Patient to keep them as calm as possible, reassure them that their opinion matters and try not to take any outbursts personally.


The Passive Patient
Finding Comfort: This patient finds comfort in trusting the authority, in handing their fate to those doctors and nurses who know more and have the skills and experience it takes to handle a healthcare problem.


Becoming Empowered: This patient feels most empowered when they have someone close to them who can coach them and support them through the healthcare experience. They are capable of being their own advocate but need validation and encouragement to act on their own behalf.


The Draw Back: While the trust The Passive Patient holds for professionals makes this patient easy to work with, there is a price to pay for violating this trust. Once a professional has behaved in a hurtful way or made a medical error, this patient has the potential to explode or, at the very least, stew silently while planning their escape from your care.


Caring for The Passive Patient: This patient will appear to have few opinions and will usually be quite pleasant. The Passive Patient rarely questions professionals and will often remain quiet even in the face of emotionally insensitive staff. Do not be fooled by this exterior, however, because this patient is watching and evaluating everything. It is in the privacy of friends and family that The Passive Patient will reveal the pain, anger and trauma they experienced in silence.


So, what do you think? Do you see yourself in any of these portraits? Have I painted a realistic characterization of you or some of the patients you know? What patient portraits have you observed? Do you think that if we embraced the idea of everyone coping differently, we would have a more compassionate healthcare environment?

3 comments:

victor said...

Everything nowadays seems to be moving at the speed of light and trust me, this almost 63 year old young man could write a hundred books with the help of sinner vic, tim and his many other spiritual friends but I won't allow them to do so.

Victor's flesh keeps telling them that it will all slow down when we get to spiritual grade one with God’s Angels. Each of our cells will learn how we can all become in The Image of God but on so many occasions they just won’t listen. Go Figure! Will we humans ever learn? :)

P.S. I've got to get after my wife to give me your book so that I can finish reading it. Right now she's gone to the bingo so I guess I'll just have to wait.

God Bless,

Peace

Anonymous said...

This was the basis of my thesis work when it comes to lupus and support groups. One size does not, nor can it, fit all.

I am so glad to see someone else recognize that we all need to focus not only on what our illnesses bring into who we are, but to also recognize just how multi-faceted we are in addition to our symptoms first and foremost.

What complicates these 'types' even further are the combinations of people (those in our 'support' networks like doctors, family and employers). The combinations of the medications we take to treat one symptom/condition that may lead to the result of another.

Or, plain and simple when it comes to something like lupus, how we can potentially visit each and every one of these types - within a 24-hour period!

We need to treat the individuals who live with illness - not just the illness itself.

Anonymous said...

These portraits were very accurate, and I could see each one come to life. I could also see how several of them combine to create my own personality as a patient, and it allowed me to consider the potential drawbacks to my interaction style and how others may perceive it. It was also interesting because I have experienced every patient style at one point or another, and in some ways I think they can reflect different ways and "stages" of coping with an illness. For example, as a young adult on my own in the medical world for the first time I was fairly compliant and passive due to how overwhelming it all seemed at that points in my life. Once it was no longer so overwhelming, how I interacted in that environment changed. It can also change based upon how I am feeling, with greater passive tendencies when I feel completely awful and greater self-advocacy and need to be included in decisions and provided information when not quite so dreadful. Thank you for opening my mind to this in an entirely new way!
Bethany

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