Communicating with Health Care Professionals
November 21st, 2008
November is National Family Caregivers Month, designated by the government to recognize the efforts of spouses, children, and other family members in giving free care to loved ones struggling with chronic health needs. The impact of caregiving is significant—billions of dollars of uncompensated care, billions of dollars of lost productivity, and increased stress-related health conditions among the caregivers.
- 17% of family caregivers are providing 40 hours of care a week or more.
- The value of the services family caregivers provide for “free” is estimated to be $306 billion a year. That is almost twice as much as is actually spent on homecare and nursing home services combined ($158 billion).
As a caregiver and a health policy expert, the statistics that were the most painful to learn:
- 22% of family caregivers say they need help communicating with physicians.
- 50% of caregivers reported that different providers gave different diagnoses for the same set of symptoms and 62 % reported that different providers gave other conflicting information.
- Over 40% of U.S. primary care physicians think they don’t have enough time to spend with patients.
Communication is such an issue that the National Family Caregivers Association (the source of these statistics) chose as the topic of their first two national teleclass/webinars, “Communicating Effectively with Healthcare Professionals.” In addition to learning how good communication can facilitate optimum health care and how to prepare for doctor office visits, the classes also featured how to:
- Distinguish between different styles of communicating with healthcare professionals
- Compose assertive messages for communicating in healthcare situations
- Be prepared for and cope with an emergency room visit.
I’ll be celebrating National Family Caregivers Month by reaching out to other family members and friends about effective communications with their physicians and other healthcare professionals.
More details and resources for caregivers are available on NFCA’s website at: www.nfcacares.org, and the National Alliance for Caregiving at www.caregiving.org.
Related posts:
- Remote Health Monitoring: Using Communications Technology to Deliver Health Care Services
- A Caregiver’s View of the Stimulus Bill
- Bailing out Health Care: My Top 10 Priority List for the Next Secretary of HHS
- Transitional Care: A Way to Save $18 Billion – and Improve Health Outcomes
- Disruptive Women in Health Care Honored






November 22nd, 2008 at 5:21 pm
[...] Disruptive Women in Health Care » Blog Archive » Communicating with Health Care Professi… – Useful information about the significance of caregiving by families. The best PHR systems (or actually, any that serve patients) know this and provide act-for-another functions. [...]