How to Communicate to Hospital Patients Effectively

How to Communicate to Hospital Patients Effectively – This is a place for the community to provide tips and advice on How to Communicate to Hospital Patients Effectively. This topic was created by Janice Wahnon and the tips are provided by the community. The tips you add here can be your own or referred from another site. The best tips are then ranked at the top when up-voted by members of the community.

Tip 1 - Effectively communicate to maximize patient satisfaction

Published:  | Submitted by Dhevash Govender | permalink
Effectively communicate to maximize patient satisfaction

Physicians often find themselves in the difficult situation of effectively communicating important information to their patients in a finite period of time.

Tip 2 - Communicating with Residents, Patients and Families

Published:  | Submitted by Maurice Linnemans | permalink
Communicating with Residents, Patients and Families

Communicating effectively with residents, patients and families is key to providing quality health care. The manner in which you communicate information can be equally as important as the information.

Tip 3 - Barriers to Effective Communication in a Hospital | eHow

Published:  | Submitted by Renato Vasques | permalink
Barriers to Effective Communication in a Hospital | eHow

Effective communication within hospitals depends on efficient patient care coordination, proper use of technology, and sound communication management procedures. Barriers to any of these can impede the effective transfer of information among hospital staff. According to the American Hospital Association, good communication in the health-care...

Tip 4 - Use of Communication Technologies to Cost-Effectively Increase the Availability of Interpretation Services in Healthcare Settings

Published:  | Submitted by Bertrand Bocquet | permalink
Use of Communication Technologies to Cost-Effectively Increase the Availability of Interpretation Services in Healthcare Settings

Poor patient–provider communication due to limited English proficiency (LEP) costs healthcare providers and payers through lower patient use of preventive care, misdiagnosis, increased testing, poor patient compliance, and increased hospital and ...

About Author

More by Janice Wahnon

No more topics...

About This Topic

Category: Fun | 9 years, 7 month(s) ago

23.3k+ Reads
4 Tips
4 Votes
1 Likes
0 Saved