Examples of patient's satisfaction in the following topics:
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- The interactions between physicians, nurses, and patients are central to healthcare.
- A patient is any recipient of health care services.
- Patients' satisfaction with an encounter with health care service is mainly dependent on the duration and efficiency of care, and how empathetic and communicable the health care providers are.
- It is favored by a good doctor-patient relationship.
- Evaluate the importance of positive interactions between physicians, nurses and patients, in terms of satisfaction with health care services
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- As the name indicates, patients with this disorder are prone to overeat, often in binges.
- An important additional factor is that BED patients often lack the ability to recognize hunger and satisfaction, something that is normally learned in childhood.
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- This was the explanation given for the wide disparity in Medicare spending for patients in the last two years of their lives at top teaching hospitals: per patient costs at UCLA were $93,000, but only $53,000 at the Mayo Clinic.
- The quality of care and patient life expectancy did not differ between these two hospitals, despite the substantial difference in costs.
- Patients in most markets have no more than one or two heart specialists or brain surgeons to choose from, making competition for patients between such experts very limited.
- Conversely, placing the cost of a visit to a general practitioner too low will lead to excessive visits wasting both a patient's and a doctor's time.
- Thus, it is possible for personal satisfaction with the system to go down, while metrics go up.
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- Freud went on to develop theories about the unconscious mind and the mechanism of repression and established the field of verbal psychotherapy by creating psychoanalysis, a clinical method for treating psychopathology through dialogue between a patient and a psychoanalyst.
- Freudian psychoanalysis refers to a specific type of treatment in which the "analysand" (the analytic patient) verbalizes thoughts, including free associations, fantasies, and dreams, from which the analyst induces the unconscious conflicts.
- This causes the patient's symptoms and character problems, and interprets them for the patient to create insight for resolution of the problems.
- The specifics of the analyst's interventions typically include confronting and clarifying the patient's pathological defenses, wishes, and guilt.
- Through the analysis of conflicts, including those contributing to resistance and those involving transference onto the analyst of distorted reactions, psychoanalytic treatment can hypothesize how patients unconsciously are their own worst enemies: how unconscious, symbolic reactions that have been stimulated by experience are causing symptoms.
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- The mismatch between a clinician's level of communication and a patient's ability to understand can lead to medication errors and adverse medical outcomes.
- Health care professionals (doctors, nurses, public health workers) can also have poor health literacy skills, such as a reduced ability to clearly explain health issues to patients and the public.
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- Some scholars have maintained a distinction by describing illness as a patient's subjective perception of an objectively defined disease.
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- Anti-retroviral treatment of infected patients also significantly reduces their ability to transmit HIV to others.
- The opportunistic infections AIDS patients develop depend in part on the prevalence of these infections in the patient's geographic area.
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- Those same studies associate religious involvement with reports of higher satisfaction with sex life and a sense of well-being.
- Religious involvement was related to less psychological distress, more life satisfaction, and better self-actualization.
- Finally, as signaled in a recent review of 850 research papers, the majority of well-conducted studies suggest that higher levels of religious involvement are positively associated with indicators of psychological well-being (life satisfaction, happiness, positive affect, and higher morale).
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- The theory assumes a positive relationship between activity and life satisfaction.
- Compare the activity model and disengagement model of aging, in terms of activity level and level of life satisfaction
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- Research has demonstrated that these socialization techniques lead to positive outcomes for new employees including higher job satisfaction, better job performance, greater organizational commitment, and reduction in stress.
- Research has shown relationship building to be a key part of the onboarding process, leading to outcomes like greater job satisfaction, better job performance and decreased stress.