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Ms. Andrews told us about having been physically, psychologically, and sexually abused by her drug-addicted parents and in serial foster homes; how teenage prostitution and crime had helped support her own habit; and how much she missed her two children, who had been taken away by the state. She explained why some people prefer living on the streets to staying in shelters, that cocaine helped her mood more than sertraline, and that she loved horror movies and Stephen King novels. She seemed glad to be able to talk without fighting. The students asked a few respectful questions that Ms. Andrews answered patiently. We thanked her and left to discuss the interview. The student who had presented her case commented that he hadnt realized that if Ms. Andrews was allowed to curse like a drill sergeant for 30 seconds or so, the wind would leave the sails of her hostility and she could actually have a sharp sense of humor. All the students seemed a bit shaken by the rather horrendous extent of her abuse history, but it clearly evoked compassion rather than revulsion. She seemed less the so-called classic borderline case than a person who came by her very difficult behavior honestly. One student asked whether all we had done was to get her to idealize us, as alleged borderlines are supposed to do. I didnt think she had idealized us so much as she had chosen not to fight with us a significant difference. Of course, we had the luxury of not having to negotiate
a cigarette break with her, but I think the students saw that successful negotiation begins with some basic understanding of the other sides position. I hoped they also saw that I had done nothing mysteriously psychiatric in the interview and that there was no reason why they couldnt do what I had done, given time and practice. Ms. Andrewss impossible behavior had become more intelligible, and the students learned that there were ways to begin collaborating with patients who have trouble doing so. We got some follow-up on Ms. Andrews at our meeting the next week. The medical student had informed the rest of the care team about the psychosocial background we had discovered, most of which had come as a surprise to them. Ms. Andrews had continued in her difficult ways but with much less intensity. Since she now knew that her caregivers knew something about the hell her life had been (and still was), she could afford to curb her antagonism and allow others to feel some sympathy for her. The intern still employed the student as the primary ambassador of medical care but with less worry that compassionate behavior on the students part would somehow undermine the teams purpose. Difficult Patient Rounds exposed students to the variety of settings in which clinicians feel like pulling out their hair. We found a more palatable side to the insufferably narcissistic patient and saw how the manipulative charm of the more sociopathic one could be leveraged
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toward an alliance based less on lies and more on shared goals. When the students didnt have a behaviorally difficult patient on service, wed focus on one whose case exemplified what could be called the psychiatry of everyday medicine: those issues of competency, depression, suicidality, delirium, and so forth that are ubiquitous on every clinical service but are often seen as troublesome distractions in treatment. Such patients provided a reliable stream of teachable moments. Students found the exercise useful for at least three reasons: it allowed them to learn advanced tactical interviewing skills at the bedside, it demystified common psychiatric concepts, and it provided a more strategic perspective on engaging and better under-
standing a wide range of patients. Sometimes we would interview a patient who just seemed interesting: the homeless man with a large community of friends, the delusional woman with a number of outlandish convictions, the Holocaust survivor who still had a zest for living. In each case, we could discover the psychosocial equivalent of egophony or pulsus paradoxus: fascinating aspects of the patient, readily seen if you know how and where to look for them. Osler wrote long ago that it is much more important to know what sort of a patient has a disease than what sort of a disease a patient has. To modern ears, this assertion can unfortunately sound like irrelevant high-mind-
edness from a vanished era rather than a principle that can tangibly improve patient care and professional satisfaction. I dont know what Osler actually did to determine what sort of a patient has a disease, but holding rounds on behaviorally difficult patients is one way to show the usefulness of his principle. These rounds can demonstrate the immediate payoff of knowing even a little bit about a patients life. Lose that knowledge, and we risk becoming more technician than clinician.
(The patients name and identifying details have been changed to protect her privacy.) No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported. From the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School both in Boston.
Copyright 2009 Massachusetts Medical Society.
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The New England Journal of Medicine Downloaded from nejm.org at FLAMEDLIB on August 26, 2011. For personal use only. No other uses without permission. Copyright 2009 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.