the patient and the hospital

14
THE PATIENT AND THE HOSPITAL STUDY UNIT 9.2 BY C SETTLEY

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Page 1: The Patient and the hospital

THE PATIENT AND THE

HOSPITAL

STUDY UNIT 9.2

BY C SETTLEY

Page 2: The Patient and the hospital

LEARNING OUTCOMES

- Briefly describe stages of illness behaviour as described by Suchman:

- The symptom experience stage

- Assumption of the sick role

- The medical care contact stage

- The dependent patient role

- The operative phase

- The post-operative phase

- The recovery and rehabilitation

- The terminal phase

- Briefly discuss the stressful experiences associated with hospitalisation and contact -with other health facilities under the following headings:

- Loss of privacy

- Loss of independence

- Depersonalisation and the loss of identity

Page 3: The Patient and the hospital

8 STAGES OF ILLNESS

BEHAVIOR. PAGE 201

1) The symptom experience stage

- Realization that something is wrong

- Self medication to alleviate symptoms

2) Assumption of the sick role

- Acknowledgement of sickness

- “off sick” at work

3) The medical care contact stage

- Doctors visit

- Sickness is substantiated by the medical doctor or

sangoma

Page 4: The Patient and the hospital

8 STAGES OF ILLNESS

BEHAVIOR

4) The dependent patient role

- The sick person becomes the patient

- Subjected to diagnoses, sick role and treatment

5) The operative phase

- Mystery surrounding the disease

- Bodily functions

- Previous operations

6) The post operative phase

- Acute phase: the conscious and unconscious state

- Sub- acute phase: when the patients consciousness overrules the subconscious

- The will to survive becomes dominant

Page 5: The Patient and the hospital

8 STAGES OF ILLNESS

BEHAVIOR

7) Recovery and Rehabilitation

8) The terminal phaseSymptom

experience

Role assumption

Medical care contact

Dependent patient

Operative phase

Post operative phase

Recovery and rehab

Terminal

Page 6: The Patient and the hospital

STRESS ASSOCIATED

WITH HOSPITALIZATION

PAGE 203

LOSS OF PRIVACY

- Patients who demand single rooms

- Contagious diseases

- Facilities are shared

- Restriction of visiting hours

- Information shared among medical team

- Important aspects during handovers

Page 7: The Patient and the hospital

STRESS ASSOCIATED

WITH HOSPITALIZATION

LOSS OF INDEPENDENCE

- Responsibility towards own health some what taken over

by medical team

- Patient may become unable to see to own care

- Social roles compromised

- Responsibilities are compromised

- Valuables and clothing. Referred to as ‘stripping’

Page 8: The Patient and the hospital

STRESS ASSOCIATED

WITH HOSPITALIZATION

DEPERSONALISATION AND THE LOSS OF IDENTITY

- When patients are being referred to as a medical disease,

the number of their bedroom, organs, procedures

- Reduces patient’s self-esteem, humanity

Page 9: The Patient and the hospital

Study unit 9.3

PATIENT RELATIONSHIPS IN HOSPITAL

Page 10: The Patient and the hospital

PATIENT RELATIONSHIPS

IN HOSPITAL

THE PATIENT AND

THE DOCTOR

- Medical staff become important to a patient once admitted

- Doctor contact and communication

- Privacy

- Doctors rounds

- Sometimes Patients are frightened to approach doctors themselves

THE PATIENT AND THE

NURSING PERSONNEL

- Nursing profession

responsible for 24 hour

care of patients

- Nurses have administrative

and educational roles to

fulfill at the same time

- Obliged to delegate

- Estrangement due to

perception of public

Page 11: The Patient and the hospital

PATIENT RELATIONSHIPS

IN HOSPITAL

THE PATIENT AND HIS/HER

FELLOW- PATIENTS

- Relationships are

formed

- Speculation about

complaints, treatment,

etc

- Variety of norms

Page 12: The Patient and the hospital

PATIENT RELATIONSHIPS

IN HOSPITAL

THE NURSING PROFESSIONAL AND THE

PATIENT’S FAMILY

- Difficult to define

- Family must be regarded as clients

- The patient is the primary client

- The family is the secondary client

- Interference in progress of health

- Potential threat to nursing professionals

- They share the same objective- recovery of the patient

- Value to family participation

- Family members expect nurses to be available at all times. Makes it difficult to pay equal attention to all patients

- Complaints about Domestic problems

Page 13: The Patient and the hospital

PATIENT RELATIONSHIPS

IN HOSPITAL

THE NURSING PROFESSIONAL AND THE

PATIENT’S FAMILY

- The silent family

- Minimal/no active force

- The routine family

- Some or other direct action

- Wants nursing personnel to be aware of them

- May constitute a potential threat

- They may have complaints, and become emotional and may interfere with the treatment

- Routine: these family members are accepted as more or less part of the routine; in other words they are not too pleasant, but still tolerable

- The crisis family.

- Direct threat to medical team/nursing staff

- Intrude on privacy between the patient and the nursing staff

- Eg when asking the family member to leave the ward, it might end in conflict

Page 14: The Patient and the hospital

REFERENCE

Du Toit, D.A. & Van Staden S.J. (2009). Nursing Sociology. 4th

Edition. Pretoria: Van Schaik