Vietnamese health workers asked to
improve attitude toward patients with model conversations
Doctors
examine a patient at
Strange as it may sound, patients will arguably be more
astonished if they are nicely greeted with “good morning” by doctors or
nurses than they are if shouted at by these people when visiting public
hospitals in Vietnam.
It is not uncommon for patients to feel mistreated and suffer
the inconvenience of sharing beds with others at state hospitals across
Quite many Vietnamese doctors, nurses and caretakers do not
behave nicely toward their patients, and usually attribute the inappropriate
attitude to the huge workload they have to deal with every day.
But health workers at some major public hospitals in
These hospitals, including Bach Mai, Viet Duc and K in
With the new ‘code of conduct’ in place, Vietnamese patients
now have to be prepared so as not to be shocked when they are welcomed with a
totally different manner when coming to state hospitals.
The attitude and manner rules are required to be followed by
everyone at such hospitals, from the men in charge of the parking lots and
security guards to doctors and nurses, according to the health ministry.
A doctor examines a patient at
The guidance
includes very formal model sentences, which patients hardly expect to hear at
hospitals countrywide.
“Hi Mr. An. My name is Hung, a doctor at the internal medicine
department. Please rest on the bed so that I can give you a check-up. I’d
appreciate your cooperation.” These are the model sentences doctors are
advised to use when receiving a patient.
After seeing the patients, doctors must nicely tell them the
next steps they should do and say goodbye, according to the guidance.
In actuality, doctors and nurses do not seem to have enough
time, or patience, to start such long conversations with patients. These
overloaded people simply communicate with patients in short sentences, or
sometimes cold orders, which upset sick people.
Vietnamese patients will not be surprised if the real
conversation in the above situation is something like “Rest there! OK. Done.
Next!”
How would this health worker practice the model sentences with every of these patients? Photo: Tuoi Tre
A survey carried out by Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper at central-level
hospitals in 2014 found that doctors could only spend one minute on
examining each patient as there would be always long lines of hundreds of
people waiting for their turn to have the check-ups.
The health ministry, however, is determined to launch the
drive as those working at public hospitals tend to treat patients as people
who are there to beg for help, a fact Minister of Health Nguyen Thi Kim Tien
does not deny.
“We have to change such a way of thinking,” she said at a
meeting about the “Changing Attitude at Hospitals” drive in
“The health industry must have a complete facelift in terms of
manners and attitude when serving patients.”
Tien said the ministry will hold training workshops for health
workers across the country to adopt the new attitude and manner.
Even when health workers behave in a friendlier way toward
patients, those visiting state hospitals countrywide will still have to share
sickbeds with others, with the health ministry seemingly believing that
improving the attitude toward patients is more important than solving the
overloading issue.
Patients rest on the floor due to the lack of sickbeds at the
Health workers at hospitals that have committed to join the
drive admitted to Tuoi Tre that they do not have enough time to
greet patients due to excessive workloads.
At K Hospital in
Patients at other hospitals said while they were not shouted
at by doctors and nurses, they did not hear any “thank you”, “please” or
“sorry” from them either.
A leader of a hospital participating in the drive said it is
really difficult to follow the exact model sentences in the guidelines when
health workers are overloaded.
“Using model sentences does not mean doctors care about
patients,” he said.
TUOI TRE NEWS
|
Thứ Năm, 6 tháng 8, 2015
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét