In
the mad rush of today’s outpatient department , even as I noted the duration of
his cough and enquired about the tremulousness of his hand, I could , feel the
ticking hands of the clock breathing down my neck.
The
corridor outside my tiny room was overflowing with the sick and the needy,
ebbing with tales of pain and sorrow. They sat there pleading to be heard,
hoping to be understood, and above all, praying to be cured. I felt overawed by
this sheer deluge that was now at my doorstep, people, families from far and
wide were here, having battled long queues and prolonged waiting lists running
into months just to obtain this appointment.
Would
the next few minutes they spend with me put a name on their suffering, or would
they still be wandering in the dark corridors of ambivalence, oscillating
between hope and despair.
The next few minutes, that is all I have to
understand this person’s elaborate story spanning a third of his life, a story
of his pain in the arm , and how he lost his job, that of how he was previously
the sole bread winner in a family of six, and the repercussions this had on his
state of mind and how that in turn worsened his pain , and how he had taken up the
bottle in a means to end his sorrows and
how all of this had lead him to today where he no longer recognized his wife.
The
wife sat beside, holding back tears that were threating to flood my calm
clinical mind. I empathized with the family, I put myself in their shoes, the rather
uncomfortable, and worn out shoes to the already aching heels.
How
could I bring a glimmer of hope over their furrowed brows? I had a dozen more
questions in mind, both clinical and humanitarian. The differentials were
stacking up in the back of my mind, yet they were vague and fuzzy, I need to
pore over some more details, some old reports, talk to the daughter, I needed
more time!
I jolted back to the reality of my crowded
OPD. The next patient was already peeping through the flimsy curtain.
I
deftly jotted down the history, the details afforded to me by my brief yet
thorough physical examination, I noted that there was no acute emergency, at
least none from a doctor’s and medical point of view, ( I tried not to think of
the fact that for the stricken family, the gravity of this situation of theirs
was no less than an absolute emergency ) . I noted the differential diagnoses
that I had arrived at and I moved on to the management plan.
What
diagnostic clarity I lacked for the want of time to delve deeper into the
history, I tried to make up with the help of the wide array of diagnostic tools
I had at my fingertips, the laboratory investigations, imaging modalities and molecular
level tests. I picked the best ones for my patient and handed it to them along
with the usual slip for a review appointment.
The
patient’s wife looked at me confused, how could these tests, whose names she
could barely pronounce, help cure her ailing man?
I
tried to explain to her how this worked, and she seemed reassured, her faith in
my white collared coat, in the degree hanging on my wall and above all in the
legacy of my profession had helped ease her doubts.
And
thus I made it through a long day in the out-patient department.
Yet
I couldn’t block out the gnawing thought at the back of my head. Was I doing
justice to my patient?
Are we,
the modern clinicians doing justice to the legacy of our great forefathers? Are
we giving ourselves sufficient time to delve into the history?
In
the halls of our great medical schools, it is often said that history reveals
90% of the diagnosis. That is a resounding number, far better than any PET or
PCR.
It
is not merely the story itself, but how the story is told, what is mentioned
and sometimes, more importantly, what is omitted, that leads us to the
diagnosis.
An
anonymous quote sends out this ominous warning. “A doctor who cannot take a good history and a patient who cannot give
one are in danger of giving and receiving bad treatment!”
Not
just the history but a thorough physical examination, will tell us most
diagnoses without having to drag our patient through a battery of tests.
To
enunciate my point, merely looking at the nails of a patient can help us diagnose
Cyanosis (which is indicative of a respiratory compromise), Obstructive Lung
Disease, Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Infective Endocarditis, Iron deficiency
anemia, Liver cell failure,Psoriasis and Renal failure.
The
beauty of the physical examination is that it can be performed anywhere and is
the fastest modality in an acute emergency setting. If done right, it can help
the doctor literally scan a patient from top to toe in a few minutes, and
voila! Here’s the diagnosis!
But
unfortunately these time tested medical practices have fallen by the wayside.
So
why then are we denying ourselves these crucial tools? Those that have been
honed and handed down to us over the centuries.
Is it the numbers that is pushing us down this road? The need to see more patients, to write out more prescriptions and ultimately to reach an agreeable number on the balance sheet?
Is it the numbers that is pushing us down this road? The need to see more patients, to write out more prescriptions and ultimately to reach an agreeable number on the balance sheet?
Is
that what is eating into all our time? The precious minutes we owe to our
ailing patients. Each extra minute spent with one patient, is a minute less to
see an extra patient. Is this the eternal tug-o-war of quality vs quantity?
It’s
often the bond that a doctor establishes with the patient, that’s the most
important determinant in how well the patient fares. This rapport that is at
the crux of all our treatment strategies takes time to be established. Are we
then able to give them this time? Given time, the patient himself will tell you
all you need to know about his illness.
It
has been observed that most patients feel reassured ones the doctor palpates
and examines them. The mere act of looking into the patient’s eye, examining
them and offering a word of comfort, has done us good for centuries up until
now.
Moreover
bedside discussions have been at the epicenter of medical teaching, and there
is no reason to abandon it. Seeing a sign demonstrated on the patient,
auscultating a murmur, these are irreplaceable, even in the era of the
internet.
To
quote William Osler, one of the clinicians par excellence, “He who studies medicines without books sails an uncharted sea, but he
who studies medicine without patients, does not go to sea at all.”
Technology
and its advances are no doubt very important to the development and progress of
medical science. CT, MRI and 3D printers have allowed us to view the human body
like never before. Yet they were never meant to, and they cannot supersede the
basic history and examination sequence. It’s here that our clinical acumen and
the armory of investigations will aid in putting the final puzzle together.
In
other words, trying to arrive at a diagnosis without a decent history/clinical
examination is like trying to predict what a picture puzzle will look like when
a significant number of pieces are missing.
Ours
is a profession that deals with life and its myriad complexities. It therefore
takes another human being to feel the pain, touch the wound and heal it.
Plato the renowned Greek philosopher rightly
said, “The greatest mistake in the
treatment of diseases is that there are physicians for the body and physicians
for the soul, although the two cannot be separated.”
Tests
and drugs will most likely cure the patient’s physical ailments, but will we
heal the mind?
It’s
the daily interaction with the patient, the physical presence of the doctor,
the empathy in the physician’s eye that, the primeval bond that forms between
two beings when one helps the other, this is what is at the heart of our
profession.
But has this era of corporatization of
healthcare, cutting edge investigations and other modalities, meant to aid us,
curtailed our inherent instincts of sitting at a patient’s bed side.
Floundering in this vast sea, are we treating then the X-ray or the patient?
The
ancient Chinese wisdom proclaims, “It’s
easy to get a thousand prescriptions but hard to get one single remedy.”
I
wonder if in this nearly mechanized world, will the empathy in medicine, the
art of eliciting a history and the clinical examination die out altogether.
Are we, the clinicians of this era the ‘lost
sheep of modern medicine’? And is it time for a relook?
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