Abstract
The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)
Author Contributions
Copyright© 2020
Luis Turabian Jose.
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Introduction
The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) Communication and the doctor-patient relationship connect the biomedical and psychosocial aspects of clinical care Today's remote telecare mutually convenient encounters seem far removed from previous ones, which now seem unsustainable. It's about making the most of the new reality. A halo of romantic myth covered the previous psychological concepts of doctor-patient relationship. Despite the supposed models of patient-centered care, in the doctor-patient relationship there is a power relationship that has a social basis that cannot be avoided individually by doctor and patient The doctor-patient relationship with social connection but physical distancing, through telecare, could facilitate that such health care is truly considered patient-centered: the GP adopting an attitude where the patient is recognized as a person in an interaction instead of as a medical objective. So to speak, telecare can help the doctor be less a doctor and more of a person. This vision contributes to a participatory and holistic conception and interaction of the patient On the other hand, the idea that the patient always prioritizes continued care with their general practitioner (GP) is not true at present For some GPs this new scenario of virtual encounters, which does not allow physical examination, does not make sense. How is hepatomegaly detected, lymphadenopathy palpated, chest percussion, peritoneal rebound caused…? In any case, in telemedicine you can do a physical exam: the importance of the general appearance (sick or not, weight, anxiety), respiratory effort; dyspnea (a previously described but largely unknown technique for assessing shortness of breath and hypoxia is the Roth Score: simply requires a patient to breathe deeply and count out loud to 30 as quickly as possible while timing before the next breath; not being able to count to 7 or count for 5 seconds has a sensitivity of 100% and 91%, respectively, for oxygen saturation less than 95%); the environmental factors, including a visual assessment of the home that can not be accomplished in an office visit; have patients (or family members) feel and count their pulse out loud; monitoring your own vital signs and oxygen saturation at home; assess peritonitis by observing the patient as he jumps up and down; ask the elderly patient who is unstable to show the design of her house to identify possible risks of falls, etc. If a patient cannot remember the name of a prescription that needs to be repeated, the patient may be asked to go to the medicine cabinet to retrieve the bottle. And the GP can see other family members during the consultation In addition, especially in the monitoring and management of patients with chronic diseases, telemedicine can allow shorter and more frequent virtual visits for chronic patients, and can add the ability to connect multiple providers in the care of one patient at the same time achieving comprehensiveness and contextualization more easily than in face-to-face consultations Changes in the mode of relationship also imply changes in diagnostic and prescription strategies. In any case, it should be taken into account that the doctor-patient care relationship is a technical instrument at the service of the diagnosis and treatment of the patient and that the doctor-patient relationship can take many valid forms, including the one that can be formed through telecare. Focusing on the comparison in the diagnostic accuracy between virtual visits and in person is a false dichotomy, since in both the same diagnostic steps are maintained. The truth is that it is possible to create and strengthen healing relationships in telehealth encounters, based on what can be called "physical distancing with social connection" The heal care transition is now. Such changes are likely to continue as long as the pandemic continues, but to form a new normal The model of the doctor-patient relationship is an element of "context creation" General medicine has shifted towards telemedicine. This will allow a more routine, flexible, accessible, acceptable, participatory, contextualized, biopsychosocial and humane care. In addition, it permits to being safer against the risk of contagions in the face-to-face consultation. The virtual doctor-patient relationship through telecare is not opposed to face-to-face consultations, which could be a small percentage of the total. Post-COVID-19 doctor-patient relationship models should be useful in helping to intelligently manage uncertainty. The goal is always that each medical intervention and diagnosis should contribute something to the patient. The excellent consultation would be the one where the doctor finds things that are significant for him, and makes it easier for the patient to also find things that are significant for him. The evaluation of interventions must attend to biomedical results, but also to social, psychological, and existential experience of the patient. It is time to change our way of thinking about the doctor-patient relationship