Privacy and confidentiality are vital in emergency care,
particularly for patients who may be reluctant to undress or divulge
sensitive personal information in front of companions in an exam
room or strangers in a hallway, researchers note in the Emergency
Medicine Journal.
To see how doctors think this lack of privacy affects care,
researchers surveyed 440 emergency room physicians attending a
medical conference in Boston in 2015.
“What we found is that these non-private encounters not only affect
the accurate diagnosis of medical conditions, but also of social and
behavioral conditions such as domestic violence, human trafficking,
suicidality, and substance use,” said lead study author Dr. Hanni
Stoklosa, an emergency physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and
Harvard Medical School in Boston.
“This is quite concerning on many levels because emergency
departments are on the front lines of caring for patients most
vulnerable to these conditions,” Stoklosa said by email.
Overall, nine in 10 doctors surveyed said they changed or shortened
how they took patient medical histories when another person was
present, and more than half of the physicians also altered how they
did physical exams.
More than three-quarters of the doctors said that, at least
sometimes, they did an abbreviated medical history when patients
were treated in hallways. Under these circumstances, nearly all of
the doctors also reported sometimes, often or always changing how
they conducted physical exams.
Even when patients had an exam room, nearly all of the doctors said
they at least occasionally altered how they gathered medical
histories or conducted physical exams when a friend or family member
was present.
While most physicians said patient gender wasn’t a factor, doctors
were more likely to change how they did medical histories and exams
for female patients, the study also found.
Changes to medical histories and exams were most common with genital
and urinary problems, the study found.
Only 26 percent of doctors said taking an abbreviated medical
history had not led them to fail to diagnose a social issue like
suicidal thinking or elder abuse, while 54 percent said changes in a
physical exam due to lack of privacy had not caused them to miss
such issues.
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But more than one-third of doctors said they had missed cases of
domestic violence under these circumstances, while about 12 percent
had overlooked instances of child abuse.
In addition, 47 percent of doctors thought a shortened medical
history was linked to missing substance abuse and 25 percent said an
altered exam had this result.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how care in hallways or without privacy might lead to delays or
misdiagnosed patients. It also focused only on the opinions of
doctors at a medical conference, and results might differ with a
broader, nationally representative group of emergency physicians.
Even so, the results add to evidence that the environment or
surroundings in which patients are cared for may influence their
treatment, said Dr. Bernard Chang, a professor of emergency medicine
at Columbia University Medical Center in New York City.
“Past work has found that patients treated in overcrowded emergency
departments often have delays in medical care and increased risk of
medical errors,” Chang, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by
email.
A lack of privacy may at least partially explain this increased
risk.
“While an ideal situation would be for patients to have their own
private space to talk with their providers, in the emergency
department, patients are often seen in crowded and at times high
stress situations, and the ability to get a private room may just
not be practically feasible,” Chang said.
“Patients should recognize that they always have the right to
request some space to discuss private matters away from other
individuals with their doctor,” Chang added. “It may not mean that
they will always get a private room, but most emergency staff will
make their best effort to at least temporarily find a place to
discuss sensitive topics in a space away from potentially prying
ears.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2F4QmoY Emergency Medicine Journal, online
February 7, 2018.
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