5 Steps to a Patient Centered Hospital
Posted in Blog: Whose health is it anyway? Communicating on February 26, 2011 by kathy
Although filled to the brim with patients, hospitals were created to support doctors, not us patients. Historically, their organizational structure focused on doctors’ needs and doctors’ requirements. The concept of centering hospital care on patient needs and requirements is a relatively recent development.
How can a hospital switch from being provider-centered to patient-centered? Shifting such a complicated and cumbersome behemoth a full 180 degrees is a huge undertaking.
I believe it can be done. I’ve put much thought into this and feel my 5 steps are do-able and (relatively) easy to implement without interfering with the changes already in evidence organizationally and technologically. My 5 steps were born of an epiphany: Without us patients there would be no hospitals. Without us patients, there’d be no place for:
- practical teaching;
- developing best practices; or
- solving health puzzles patients often present.
Patients are hospitals’ raison d’être. Here’s how you can make us feel more like the VIPs we are.
5 Steps to a Patient-Centered Hospital
1. Be Quiet.
Quiet. Shhhh. We need a library environment. I don’t want to hear staff shrieking to one another down halls and across nursing stations. You have other options. You can get up and walk over to the person you are addressing or send a text (SMS, IM etc.), a Twitter message or an email. Silence the doors, drawers, cabinets, carts. No more slamming, ramming or bashing. We VIPs have sensitive ears and nerves. I know this quiet can be done. On hospital’s office floors for example, it’s dead quiet.
2. Paint.
Hospital colours are depressing. We need something comforting and peaceful, colours that create a warm and welcoming atmosphere. Colour can also help us VIPs find our way in the hallway labyrinths. Mazes befuddle and confuse.
3. Change the linens.
Hospital bedding is just awful. Please learn from hotels. They also grapple with high volumes of laundry and infection-control requirements. Yet, their sheets have a thread count of more than 100.
4. Turn curtains into art.
The privacy curtains. Honestly! They’re utterly useless. Privacy’s a joke and the colour makes us VIPs feel we’re already dead. Instead, use them as a canvas and showcase Canadian art. Use the same industrial strength material as scrubs.
5. Let us dress with dignity.
Even if you can’t do the first 4 steps right away, there’s one I hope you’ll consider changing– the hospital gown! The hospital gown is the single most important thing that demoralizes even the most understanding VIP. They’re embarrassing for all. They de-humanize, demean and really make us VIPs feel like we’re an afterthought – and a tiresome one at that. Please change the design of the hospital gowns. Grown-ups need grown-up gowns.
Bonus: Change the floors.
Changing the floors may be too expensive. But wouldn’t it be great for every foot that ever walked on a hospital floor to have a nicer surface like bamboo or cork, providing they met with infection prevention and other necessary codes.
Perhaps, compared to the issues of patient safety, medication errors and technology inequities, what I propose may seem frivolous: nice to have, rather than need to have. But ask any one of us VIPs. For us, it’s the often the common sense, meeting-human-needs components that gives meaning to Patient Centred.
©Kathy Kastner
Comments (7 Comments)
Post a Comment
Subscribe By Email
Polls
Loading ...
Categories
- Aging at home
- Blog: Whose health is it anyway?
- Brain-works
- Communicating
- Conversations with…
- Day to day living
- Decisions
- Fearful Topics
- Feel Good Stuff
- Guest Bloggers
- Leavaing a Legacy
- Listen to me!
- Many things I didn't know
- Planning for the future
- Safety
- Seen and heard
- Sources and Resources
- Technology
- What is in the Medicine Cabinet
- Who's the boss?
Pages
Recent Posts
- Bart Mindszenthy: Eldercare lessons from Corporate Crisis Management
- Oral care: in eldercare, the mouth is often overlooked
- Diversity in Caregiving Workshop
- 3C’s of decision-making: capacity, capability, consent
- Are these the most powerful words in healthcare?
Archives
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010















Resource-full Baby Boomer and Senior Citizen News From Twitter and ElderCareChat | SandwichINK for the Sandwich Generation
June 9, 2011
[...] @KathyKastner shared the link to a wonderful little e-book, Visiting with Elders, Strategies to Help You Have a Meaningful and Rich Visit with an Elderly Loved One. Combining tips, ideas, and personal stories by relatives and caregivers, this free e-book deals with the issues of visiting seniors in nursing homes, understanding aging and cognitive loss, understanding the meaning of behaviours and feelings, checklists to help make visits special, grief and loss issues, and so much more. The PDF version of the book, which you can read online, print out, or save to your computer was written by written by Ruth Goodman, MSW, RSW, in collaboration with Linda Jackson, MSW, RSW, and Baycrest Public Affairs. It's a very useful resource for yourself and to share with your extended family. [...]
Carolyn Thomas
July 28, 2011
Oh, Kathy – this is brilliant! I’ve just reposted this on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/#!/HeartSisters
Thanks so much – love your writing!
Jeromy Agel
November 16, 2011
I’d must take a look at with you right here. That is not something I generally do! I get enjoyment in looking at a submit which will make people feel. Furthermore, many thanks for permitting me to comment!
Kimiko Kuralt
November 18, 2011
Thanx with the hard work, sustain the great operate Excellent function, I’m likely to start off a little Web site Engine training course operate utilizing your website I am hoping you appreciate running a blog with all the common BlogEngine.internet.Thethoughts you express are genuinely brilliant. Desire you’ll appropriate some much more posts.
Leif Ducci
November 18, 2011
Hello there there! This article couldn’t be composed any far better! Studying by means of this submit reminds me of my past space mate! He usually stored discussing this. I’ll ahead this informative article to him. Fairly positive he’ll have a very excellent study. Thanks for sharing!
Zachary Zell
November 18, 2011
Hello there there! This publish couldn’t be created any much better! Studying via this article reminds me of my earlier place mate! He usually stored speaking about this. I’ll ahead this short article to him. Quite positive he’ll have a very very good examine. Thanks for sharing!
Marcelene Ortuno
November 18, 2011
I’d need to look at with you right here. Which can be not something I generally do! I get enjoyment in reading through a article that will make people believe. Moreover, many thanks for permitting me to comment!