Dialogue Volume 10 Issue 2 2014 | Page 31

PRACTICE PARTNER “You started off with good intentions, but you’ve become too busy to pause, and eventually people complain,” says Dr. Martin. That revelation can be shattering, she says. You’ve worked hard, you care, maybe you haven’t taken time off in ages, and now people are critical of your very demeanour. How do some doctors feel knowing that? “They’re heartbroken,” Dr. Martin says. successive days of on-call, personality types). Blind spots include things like your facial expressions, tone of voice and body language. It’s not just what you say, but how you say it and how it’s seen. For example, does your normal restful face appear angry? Does your tone (speaking quickly or loudly, for example) intimidate others? Does your posture (arms crossed, leaning away) make patients or colleagues less likely to share information or approach you? Knowing your triggers and blind spots can help “bulletproof ” you, suggests Dr. Martin. That awareness can remind you, she says, to “minimize the room for misinterpreDr. Martin works to help tation when your underlying Another example of where good intenintent is good.” people recognize their trigtions can go awry is with humour. Dr. Martin points out that gers and blind spots. Both Many doctors use humour to build rapport and alleviate tension, but what can have huge effects on how Dr. Atul Gawande, a surgeon and journalist, wrote a New is considered funny is very subjecpeople communicate and are Yorker article about coaching tive and dependent on variables such for medical professionals, called as culture and context. While some perceived by others. “Personal Best.” In the article, patients might regard a doctor’s quip he pointed out that world-class as harmless, others might interpret athletes and concert-calibre musicians have coaches, so the joke as offensive or as minimizing their concerns. why not doctors? No matter how well-trained you are, Rather than building rapport, the doctor has inadverit’s hard to sustain high performance without taking a tently broken trust. step back to evaluate how you’re doing. Silence is not necessarily approval and understanding is not the same as agreement. Dr. Martin works to help For the article, Dr. Gawande talked to renowned people recognize their triggers and blind spots. Both violinist Itzhak Perlman and the famous soprano Renée can have huge effects on how people communicate and Fleming. Both commented that the great challenge in are perceived by others. Triggers might include certain performing is listening to yourself. What musicians and situations, topics and circumstances (e.g., lack of sleep, singers perceive, they said, is often quite different from 4.  ecognize when you are hungry, R sleep deprived, time pressured or got up on the wrong side of the bed. Slow down, filter your thoughts and watch your tone of voice. 5.  ilence is not approval and we all S have blindspots. Always invite comments so you have the opportunity to prevent misunderstanding 6.  ou can’t read minds. Frequently Y check in with patients/colleagues to minimize assumption making. 7.  e genuinely curious. You never B know everything there is to know about another’s experience. Building a relationship begins with listening to understand. 8.  erbally and non-verbally acknowlV edge others. It’s not enough to mentally note something. 9.  ay attention to changes in tone, P body language, silence, repeated statements. 10.  atch for resistance, meaning W disagreement with how you view the problem/solution (e.g., repeated questions/statements, silence). The more you assert your viewpoint, the more the other person feels they have to assert theirs. DIALOGUE • Issue 2, 2014 PRACTICE PARTNER along, maybe the doctor doesn’t give patients a chance to ask questions. Or take the time to explain as well as he did in the past. Maybe the doctor appears impatient, glancing at the clock while a patient is talking. 31