Realistic Medicine Flashcards

1
Q

What is the idea of realistic medicine?

A

This is the idea where providing relief from disability, illness and death, medicine may have overreached itself and now cause hidden harm:

  • Should focus on what the patient values
  • Evidence-based guidance may not necessarily be appropriate for patients with multiple conditions due to possibility of over treatment
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2
Q

What are the 6 principles that realistic medicine (2015) describes?

A
  • Build a personalised approach to care
  • Change our style to shared decision making
  • Reduces unnecessary variation in practice and outcomes
  • Reduce harm and waste
  • Manage risk better
  • Become improvers and innovators
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3
Q

To practice realistic medicine, what 5 questions should you ask yourself before giving treatment?

A
  • Is the test, treatment or procedure needed
  • What are potential benefits and risks
  • What are possible side effects
  • I there a simpler, safer alternative
  • What would happen if I do nothing
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4
Q

What is personalised care?

A

This is patient centred care (refer to lecture)

Illustrate risk to patient, and consider if risks of treatment are worth it for what is going on:

  • Consider actual risk and relative risk
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5
Q

What makes a good consultation with a doctor?

A
  • Feeling listened to and not rushed
  • Clear communication
  • Resolution (diagnosis/outcome)
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6
Q

What makes a good doctor?

A
  • Knowledge
  • Listening
  • Friendly
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7
Q

What allows for shared decision making?

A

Good consultation with doctor:

  • Feeling listened to and not rushed
  • Clear communication
  • Resolution (diagnosis/outcome)

What makes a good doctor:

  • Knowledge
  • Listening
  • Friendly

The above allows decisions to be made together

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8
Q

What is used to reduce unnecessary variations in practice?

A

Guidelines are based on evidence:

  • To provide the most benefit for the least risk

Not always appropriate for patients with co-morbidity

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9
Q

What are examples of common conditions that are over-diagnosed?

A
  • Asthma
  • Prostate and thyroid cancers
  • CKD
  • Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
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10
Q

What are the consequences of over-diagonsing conditions?

A

This causes medical, social and economic consequences

A lot of the population has “issues” that are asymptomatic, and only detected if you go looking causing overtreatment and problems with unnecessary side effects

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11
Q

How is risk better managed?

A

Hypothetico-deductive reasoning is used to establish a diagnosis without needing to investigate all of the possibilities:

  • Safety netting also used

Risk various from patient to patient depending on their unique situation

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12
Q

How do doctors become “improvers and innovators”?

A
  • Using data to support discussions and learning in clinical teams
  • Reflection
    • Consider how to improve for next time
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