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BEDSIDEMANNER.INFO
BECAUSE PATIENTS JUDGE YOUR SKILLS BY YOUR BEDSIDE MANNER
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(2016/05/01)
 

Dentist: “Bob, could you let out a blood curdling scream when I start drilling?”

Patient: “But why? It never hurts that much.”

Dentist: “The waiting room is so full that I’m afraid I’m going to miss the championship game this afternoon.”

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The office environment is a reflection of the health-care provider much in the same manner as is dress and personal grooming. Since bedside manner is the perception patients have regarding your expertise, personality and very being, you can’t ignore your environment. Office design is vital to the patient experience. As a general rule, make sure your surroundings won’t offend anyone. While you may never please all of the people all of the time, try not to offend any of the people most of the time. Physical plant design techniques that enhance your image are often so subtle your patients may not notice, but they work.

The Private Entrance

If you are the type of practitioner who can’t get to the office on time, or if you have emergencies that require you to arrive late, a private entrance is essential. Nothing seems more inconsiderate than a doctor’s tardy entry met by a waiting room full of patients.

Treatment Room Privacy

Do whatever you can to keep your office a private enclave. You should isolate patients from each other. You don’t want patient A to hear your conversations with patient B. The last thing you want a patient to hear is another patient in pain. Separate patients as much as possible, by utilizing three treatment rooms. The middle room is used for simple procedures. The two end rooms are used for actual treatment. This way, approximately fifteen feet and two walls of insulation separate patients undergoing involved treatment. They are unlikely to hear confidential information about the other patient (HIPAA regulations), noise that may frighten them, complaints or financial discussions.

Equipment

Patients like to go to the doctor with the best bedside manner and the best facility. No matter how kind and personable you may be, if there is another practitioner who is just as nice they will pick the one with the latest technological innovations. Patients want the latest and the greatest care from that great doctor. Never cut corners to save money when it comes to your equipment. Be willing to invest in new technologies and learn to master them. Use the best quality materials. There is usually a reason certain items cost more, and in the end, you save money and aggravation by avoiding failing parts and equipment that need to be replaced too often. When that failing part is an implant or device placed in the patient, the consequences of not using the best can be demonstrable.

Some very mediocre doctors have all the modern equipment, and their patients are duly impressed. While the equipment doesn’t make the doctor, it certainly helps the image. Don’t fool yourself into thinking you never have to embrace new technologies or the level of care you provide will not be at the highest level possible.

 Placement of the treatment table or chair should always be facing the entrance of the room. Many design consultants want the patient facing the window when there’s a nice view. This positioning puts the patient in a vulnerable state-of-mind. The patient should always see you enter so that you don’t startle them, and they should always see the exit. On a subliminal level, the apprehensive patient doesn’t want to feel trapped or enclosed.

The Accessible Doctor

Make sure you have phones in each treatment room so you can take calls if necessary. When a patient sees you answer a call to speak with another doctor or patient, they see that you are accessible, but never take personal calls in front of the patient. Excuse yourself if you must, and make it look like you have to take a call for professional reasons.

Make sure your staff has nonverbal or cryptic ways to communicate who is on the other line. “Your stockbroker needs to speak with you” is not an announcement that should be made for the patient to hear. Speaking to your stockbroker in front of patients is offensive. Taking personal calls from your spouse or children in front of the patient is another taboo, especially when the patients wait inordinate amounts of time to see you. They want your attention.

After-hours accessibility is a must in most practices. Either a highly efficient answering service or a good answering machine that calls your cell phone helps a patient reach you when in distress. Occasionally test your system to make sure it works.

A patient wanted to make an appointment with psychologist: “I called six offices. None of the offices answered the phone. One had an answering service that put me on hold for a too many minutes with static-filled music of an unprofessional genre. When the woman got back to me, she had to look up on a list to see if this was Dr. Smith’s office. She had no idea of his hours, his fees or where he was located. Can an answering service be any more impersonal? The answering machine offices were not much better. While I could leave my number for a call back, one machine noted that ‘you must speak loud or the device will hang up on you. Sorry for the inconvenience.’ Maybe that doctor should consider buying a machine that works! The others offered that I leave my name with no mention of hours, location, or anything about when I could expect a return call. They did all caution that if I was having an emergency I should go to the emergency room. I suppose that is to protect them when it takes days to return their calls.”

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Many types of health-care providers, like the psychologists in the above examples, don’t have traditional offices or secretaries. The home office is often the venue and taking calls is not offered when they are not in or when they are seeing patients. It may be best to consider a full service answering service that has the ability to make appointments and provide any information that new or existing patients require. The first contact most new patients have before seeing you is whoever answers your phone. Make sure it is a pleasant experience or you may never see many patients.

The Distracted Patient

Some doctors like to keep the patient busy with headphone music because they want to do their work unimpeded by conversation. Some doctors have nothing to say and love to give the patient something to do to mask their lack of personality.

If you have the patient who asks to use headphones, let them. They need the distraction of the music more than they want to hear your witty monologue. If you have nothing to say, or if you make disturbing noises, like drilling, encourage the use of headphones. In either case, make sure the patients know that you are there for them, and if they need anything they should let you know. That thought is comforting.

Decorating

Office décor should be tasteful and play to your patient base. Conservative choices are less likely to offend even if they may not be your personal taste. Avoiding excesses and extremes while employing good taste in decorating will most likely please just about everyone.

Utilizing rich furnishings and decorative accessories makes some patients feel that the provider overcharges them and they are paying for all the amenities. Some practitioners actually think the more costly the office looks the better their reputation. Utilizing a balanced approach to decorating will result in a happy medium that expresses good taste, success, and comfort while avoiding pretensions.

 


Comments
• Anna (2016/05/31 22:38)
I agree that a separate entrance for the doctor and staff is an important privacy strategy as well as an important factor for the general appearance of the office. It gives the doctor the flexibility to be able to leave and go as necessary without having the patients in the waiting room to be knowledgeable it. It is important to be accessible to patients, and an opportunity to demonstrate it to the patients themselves as well as the referring doctors is a great practice-building mechanism. It is important at the same time to be careful to observe HIPPA laws and not disclose any sensitive information for patient protection. Headphones can be a useful tool to help distract the patient from unpleasant noises. I also think that staff is critical to having the patients feel at ease and confortable in an office. If they are able to relate to the patient, make them laugh and have patients talk about something they enjoy, the patient will consider of his/her visit to the office as a positive experience. Display flowers and gentle colors in the office can also help in projecting a welcoming and calming environment to the patients.
• Maria (2016/05/04 00:40)

As a resident, it's a little difficult to think about the office I will have one day. Of course I want to have the latest technology, an office that is nicely decorated, nice staff and all those things, but the amount of debt some newly graduated endodontist have is high and it may take years before you get your own office. One question I have is: how do you know your front desk person is being nice to new patients who are calling to schedule appointments and is not scaring them away. Are video cameras to check on employees a bad idea? Thanks

Editor: Video cameras should be consider for security and can certainly be used to monitor staff. Better yet, call your office and make an appointment. That's how to see what's going on at   your front desk.

• Daniel Kim (2016/05/03 20:57)
Thanks for providing this blog. This is a great overview of how the office lay out is supposed to be done. I personally think all medical and dental offices should be extremely clean and neat. When I eat out, I evaluate the cleanness of the restaurant based on bathrooms. I firmly believe the cleanness of bathrooms and kitchen is directly related. This also applies to medical and dental offices. When I had my own practice, we had frequent compliments from patients how clean my office is. I also make myself available after hours. I give out my personal cell phone number to most of my patients (except for really crazy ones) and they really appreciate that.
• Antonio (2016/04/26 20:12)
Building a practice from the ground up has to be one of the biggest challenges for dental professionals coming out of dental school or residency programs. There are many things to take into consideration and unless you won the Powerball before graduation it can be scary for many the idea of acquiring additional debt on top of our education loans and/or family/personal financial responsibilities. As you mentioned in “The Physical Plant” blog entry one has to believe that this is a life long investment and fully commit because other wise it is no different than a senseless gamble. I agree that one can not be cheap nor cut corner because it will be costlier in the long run, in combination with the associated migraines from premature equipment breakdown, poor first impressions to patients, and worst of all compromising the quality of care we can provide ranging from poor diagnosis to treatment failures which could have been prevented. One has to comprehend when taking on the challenges of building a practice that you only have one opportunity to get it right; same as you have highlighted in various blog entries; the fact that you can only make one first impression. If one does not commit to building an exceptional practice from the start; in the future one will to be tempted to continue cutting corners and settling for the ordinary. All of which will put your practice at risk and likely collapse your investment due to extraordinary young professionals or well recognized established providers in your area that both committed to excellence from the start.

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