Behavioral Science: Tareq Almaghrabi M.D Assistant Professor Faculty of Medicine UT
Behavioral Science: Tareq Almaghrabi M.D Assistant Professor Faculty of Medicine UT
Psychology
The study of the mind, occurring partly via the study of
behavior.The study of the nature, functions and phenomena
of human beings
Sociology
The scientific study of society. The study of the development,
nature and laws of human society. Sociology also focuses on
social stratification, social class, social mobility, religion,
secularisation, law, and deviance.
Spectrum of Behavioural Sciences
Anthropology:
The study of the origins, history, mechanisms and
constitution of human cultures
Ethology
The study of behavior of non-human species in the natural setting
Spectrum of Behavioral Sciences
Ecology
Deals with the relations of human beings to their
environment and the quantification of this relationship
Epidemiology
The study of illness in defined population
Objectives of Behavioral Science Teaching:
2. Patient behavior
Etiology of illness,
Presentation of illnesses,
b. The goal is to serve the patient, not to worry about legal protection for the
physician.
a. Get rid of tables and computers. If you must have a table, pick the
smallest one.
b. Ask family members to leave the room. If patient says that he or she
wants them to stay, then that is okay.
Tell the patient everything
a. Refer to other specialist when beyond your expertise (but usually not the
case) .
b. You provide instruction in aspects of care, e.g., nutrition, use of
medications.
Express empathy then give control
a. Important when faced with a patient who is grieving or is angry.
a. Take the time to talk with patients, even if others are waiting.
b. Ask "why?"
c. Ask about the patient beyond the disease: job, family, children, etc.
d. Be available. Take calls. Answer emails.
Be an advocate for the patient
a. Work to get the patient what he or she needs.
b. Never refuse to treat a patient because he or she cannot pay.
The key is not so much what you do, but how
you do it.
a. Focus on the process, not just goals; focus on means, not just ends.
b. Do the right thing, the right way.
c. The right choices are those that are humane and sensitive, and put the
interests of the patient first.
d. Treat family members with courtesy and thoughtfullness, but the wishes
and interests of the patient come first.
Type of questions during patient encounter
a. Open-ended question
b. Closed-ended question
c. Leading question
d. Confrontation
e. Facilitation "tell me about that .. :'
f. Redirection
g. Direct question: Avoid judgmental terms.
The Significance of a Good Relationship with
the Patient
a. The key is not the amount of time spent with a patient, but what is done during that time.
b. Lack of rapport is the chief reason that terminally ill patients reject medical advice, or why
patients change physicians or miss appointments.
c. Failure of patient to cooperate, or even to keep appointments, should be seen as the result of
physician insensitivity or seeming indifference.
d. An early Scandinavian study found a significant increase in sudden deaths on a coronary care
unit during or immediately following ward rounds. The formality of rounds and the imposing
authority that physicians project onto patients may have raised patient anxiety to dangerous levels.
e. The amount of information that surgical candidates receive about their upcoming operation
and about the postsurgical pain affects outcome.
Good rapport
Fosters adherence to treatment regimens
Is positively associated with a reduction of malpractice suits
Fostering Patient Adherence