A structured approach for patient consultancy providing guideline to conduct a patient consultancy session in clinical, hospital, retail settings or anywhere else patients are getting consult.
2. The ability of a pharmacist to
consult effectively is
fundamental to
pharmaceutical care and this
includes establishing a
platform for achieving
adherence/concordance.
3. Little bit of history..
Pioneering pharmacists provided
comprehensive pharmacy services to nursing
facilities as early as the 1950s.
The term ‘consultant pharmacist’ was coined
by George F. Archambault.
Who sometimes is referred as ‘founding father
of consultant pharmacy’
5. CONSULTANT
PHARMACIST
A provider of pharmacy
systems
A management expert
A member of the health
care team
A communicator
An educator
A patient care advocate
An entrepreneur
A clinical practitioner
A problem solver
An innovator
A drug information
resource
7. The mnemonic approach
WWHAM,
AS METTHOD and
ENCORE
Does not address adequately the complex
interaction that may take place between a patient
and a health care practitioner So……….,
8. Four Interlinked Phases, each with a goal and set of
competencies.
1. INITIATING THE SESSION
2. GATHERING INFORMATION
3. ACTIONS & SOLUTIONS
4. CLOSING THE SESSION
9. CONSULTATION MODELS
• The anthropological approach
• Balint
• The biomedical approach
– Stott & Davies model
• Byrne and Long - the primary care consultation
• The Calgary-Cambridge approach
• The disease-illness model
• Equipoise
• Six category intervention analysis
• Health belief model
• Helman's folk model of illness
• Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
• Neighbour’s model
• Pendleton
• Problem based interviewing
• The sociological approach
• The social-psychological approach
• Target behaviour in the consultation
• The three function approach
• Triaxial model - physical, social and psychological
• Transactional analysis
10. Identify reason(s) for consultation
Building a therapeutic relationship
Establishing Initial Rapport
11. Establishing Initial Rapport
Identify reason(s) for
consultation
Building a therapeutic re-
lationship
Greet
Introduce self and clarify role
Demonstrate interest & respect, attend to
patient’s physical comfort
12. Establishing Initial Rapport
Identify reason(s) for
consultation
Building a therapeutic re-
lationship
Greet
Introduce self and clarify role
Demonstrate interest & respect, attend to
patient’s physical comfort
Invite patient to discuss medicine or health re-
lated issue
Discuss purpose of consultation
13. Establishing Initial Rapport
Identify reason(s) for
consultation
Building a therapeutic re-
lationship
Greet
Introduce self and clarify role
Demonstrate interest & respect, attend to
patient’s physical comfort
Invite patient to discuss medicine or health re-
lated issue
Discuss purpose of consultation
Negotiating shared agendas
Use appropriate non-verbal behavior
Demonstrate appropriate confidence
Develop rapport by:
Accepting patient’s views & feelings
Empathy
Providing support
Dealing with sensitivity
15. Identify the reason for
consultation
Explore the problem
further by:
Medication related problem
Nutrition assessment & support
Adherence , compliance issues
Medical devices usage
General counseling or education
Drug regimen reviews
16. Identify the reason for
consultation
Explore the problem
further by:
Medication related problem
Nutrition assessment & support
Adherence , compliance issues
Medical devices usage
General counseling or education
Drug regimen reviews
Narrative
Open/closed question technique
Active listening
Facilitating patient's response
Picking up verbal/ non-verbal cues
Periodically summarizing the problem
Actively determine patient’s:
Ideas
Concerns Expectations
Effects
Priorities patient’s pharmaceutical problem
17. Establishing an acceptable management plan with the patient
Providing correct amount and type of information
Aiding accurate recall & understanding
Achieving a shared understanding
18. Establishing an acceptable management plan
with the patient
Providing correct
amount and type of in-
formation
Aiding accurate recall &
understanding
Achieving a shared under-
standing
Chunks and checks
Avoid any premature advice/reassurances
19. Establishing an acceptable management plan
with the patient
Providing correct
amount and type of in-
formation
Aiding accurate recall &
understanding
Achieving a shared under-
standing
Chunks and checks
Avoid any premature advice/reassurances
Use explicit categorization and signposting
Use repetition and summarizing
Use visual aids
20. Establishing an acceptable management plan
with the patient
Providing correct
amount and type of in-
formation
Aiding accurate recall &
understanding
Achieving a shared under-
standing
Chunks and checks
Avoid any premature advice/reassurances
Use explicit categorization and signposting
Use repetition and summarizing
Use visual aids
Incorporate patient’s perspective
Beliefs
Understandings
Eventually shared decision making
REFER APPROPRIATELY
22. Negotiating safety-netting
strategies with patient
Ensure appropriate point of
closure
Explain possible unexpected outcomes of the
plan
What to do if plan isn’t working
When and how to seek help
Provide further appointment or contact point
23. Negotiating safety-netting
strategies with patient
Ensure appropriate point of
closure
Explain possible unexpected outcomes of the
plan
What to do if plan isn’t working
When and how to seek help
Provide further appointment or contact point
Final check that patient agrees and is comfortable
with the plan
24. CYCLE OF CARE
• Patient can
EXIT from
the cycle
• Feedback
• The
Consultation
• Factors pre-
consultation
IMMEDIATE
OUTCOMES
INTERMEDIATE
OUTCOMES
UNDERSTANDING
LONG-TERM
OUTCOMES
25. Barriers to effective consultation
Consultant factors
• Lack of time (real or perceived)
• Inadequate clinical information.
• Inadequate clinical skills.
• Inadequate communication skills.
• Attitudinal problems.
• Poor recovery from previous stressful
consultation or life events.
• Artificial stimulants.
26. Patient factors
•Lack of time (real or perceived)
•Fear (of consultant, pain and dying)
•Lack of understanding of basic biology and
probability.
•Unscientific health beliefs.
•Unrealistic expectations of the health service.
•Unrealistic expectations of medical science.
•Aggressive attitude.
•Mental illness.
•Artificial stimulants.
28. 1. QUESTIONING STYLE
Appropriate use of open, leading and
closed questions.
Open question: ‘Tell me more
about’……’What is the pain like?’
Closed question: ‘Have you lost weight?’
29. 2. Empathy, Empowerment and Enablement
An empathetic consultant can empower the
patient and enable them to ‘move on’ from
their problem productively.
30. 3. REFLECTION
Reflect back a phrase or symptom that the
patient has mentioned in order to explore it
further.
Patient: ‘I have been feeling a bit out of
sorts....’
Consultant: ‘Out of sorts….tell me what you
mean by this.’
31. 4. RESPONDING TO CUES
‘You seem very upset/anxious…’
is an example of responding to non-verbal cue.
32. 5. NARRATIVE
Patients invariably present their problems as a
story:
‘This happened..
and then happened….
and then I felt something.. .
I talked to a few people about it. . .
Now I want to know what to do. . . . ’
Patients want to go away with a better story:
‘My problem seems less ….
I understand it better……
now I know what to do…..’
33. 6. MOTIVATIONAL INTERVIEWING
A negotiating style for helping people to
change behavior by helping patients to
explore and resolve ambivalence, increasing
motivation to change
Persuasion and coercion are not appropriate
34. Exploring both
the
disease and ill-
ness
experience
Understand-
ing
the whole
person
Finding
common
grounds
Problems
Goals
Roles
Person
Disease
Illness
Context
History
Lab
Disease
Illness
Ideas, Expectations,
Feelings, effects on
function
Mutual
Decision
Enhancing the
patient - consultant
relationship
Incorporating
prevention and
health promotion
Being
realistic
7. PATIENT CENTEREDNESS
35. 8. CHOICE OF WORDS
Little Words Can Make A big Difference
But And
Think Sure
OK? Just don’t use
Why? What? How?
Need Just don’t use
36. 9. Excellent communication skills ALONE
are not enough!!
Good communication requires a combination of. . . . .