Excerpts from the book Manners, Morals and Medical Care: How To Be an Effective Physician By: Barry Silverman and Saul Adler When patients first encounter their physician, hospital or medical insurance company, their initial impressions of the care they will receive are shaped by the physical surroundings and the healthcare workers they encounter. Consider the 25,000 ... Continue Reading
Mental Health in the Time of COVID-19
By Helen K. Kelley
With the advent of COVID-19 and the need for social distancing, constant sanitizing and mask-wearing, many Americans have experienced increased feelings of isolation, anxiety and depression. We spoke to two Atlanta practitioners who shared their insights about treating mental health issues that have been brought on or exacerbated during the pandemic. The Shared Trauma of the ... Continue Reading
Unintended Consequences: The Unexpected Impacts of Restricting Visitors in the Time of COVID-19
By Christy Hewling, MD, FACEP, and Kate Koplan, MD, MPH, FACP, CPPS
One of the most significant patient safety processes impacted by the COVID-19 response has been how family and friends support ill loved ones and interact with the healthcare team. No healthcare organization has been spared from enforcing new visitor guidelines and policies. The initial visitor limitations across the Metro Atlanta market uniformly allowed no visitors in ... Continue Reading
Atlanta Telemedicine in the COVID-19 Era
Deborah Millians of Athens was feeling the pinch of social distancing. With her 11-year-old son Charles in need of a follow-up urology appointment regarding complications from an overactive bladder, an in-office visit proved daunting. It would call for an hour-plus trek to Atlanta and pulling her child away from school work, among other logistical challenges. Using the ... Continue Reading
Clinician-Patient Communications
By Hellen K. Kelley
One of the most important keys to a successful relationship between doctor and patient is good communication. Effective communication on the physician’s part involves excellent listening skills, the knack for ferreting out pertinent details and the ability to share information with and educate the patient. Atlanta Medicine spoke with two local physicians who have expertise in ... Continue Reading
Behind the Stethoscope: The Healing Power of Compassion
By Carrie Stinson, M.D., Pediatric Hospitalist
I walked into the room with a smile on my face. I was about to discharge a 3-day-old baby to go home with his parents. I talked to the new mom and dad about what they should expect over the next few days at home with a newborn. As I examined the patient and placed my stethoscope on his chest, I knew that the course of the morning had changed. He had a loud murmur and ... Continue Reading
Solving Physician Burnout
Operational improvements are more important than resiliency. By Rob Schreiner, M.D. Dr. Carl Goolsby remembers those days. No matter how early he’d arrive at the office to prepare his charts for the day’s patients or remain in the office after the patients and staff had left, he couldn’t stay ahead of the workload. He was well-trained, with a disciplined work ... Continue Reading
PCOS: Alternative Management and Long-Term Risks
By Desiree’ M. McCarthy-Keith, MD, MPH Most practitioners are able to recognize the classic features of PCOS: obesity, androgen excess and irregular menstrual cycles. However, many patients will have few features or a subtler presentation. Despite varying degrees of the condition, all women with PCOS are at risk for metabolic and endocrine sequelae. Women’s health ... Continue Reading
Losing Prized Physicians to Burnout
By Charles Wilmer, M.D., FACC, FSCAI I recently returned from the Medical Association of Georgia’s summer legislative seminar in Blairsville, where we had 75 physicians interacting with 37 of our legislators to better understand the political climate and opportunities for growth and improvement in patient care. Some of these individuals were over 60 years of age and yet ... Continue Reading
Narrative Medicine – Letting our Patients Tell The Story
By Bob Climko, MD, MBA Many years ago, my medical school roommate invited me to dinner at the home of his mother and father, both of whom survived the horrors of Auschwitz. After a delicious meal, they began sharing stories about life in “the camp.†I asked them later why they had opened up to me. Their response was that I was one of the few people they thought could ... Continue Reading
5 Best Practices for Treating Your Muslim Patients
By Lisa Perry-Gilkes, MD, FACS With a Muslim population reported to be a quarter million and with 35 mosques in the metro area, Atlanta ranks as the city with the sixth largest Muslim population in the country. Cultural sensitivity in caring for the Muslim patients requires a basic understanding of Islam. Islam, which in Arabic is derived from the word salam, or peace, is ... Continue Reading
Health Literacy: What You Don’t Know Could Hurt You
By Lisa Perry-Gilkes, MD, FACS TAHW OUY T’NOD WONK DLOUC HURT OUY! To some of our patients, the above headline is how our documents are perceived. Unscrambled, it reads: What you don’t know could hurt you. In keeping with the best practices to improve patient care, we need to take into consideration our patients’ ability to understand their ... Continue Reading
New Northside Hospital Cherokee to open May 6
Northside Hospital Cherokee’s long-awaited replacement hospital will open for patients on Saturday, May 6, 2017. The new hospital is located at 450 Northside Cherokee Boulevard in Canton, off I-575 at the Ga. Hwy 20 exit. “This is a huge move forward for Cherokee county and the surrounding areas,†said Billy Hayes, CEO of Northside Hospital Cherokee. “Our new ... Continue Reading
The Future of Healthcare
By Helen K. Kelley The landscape of healthcare in America is facing rapid change, from the way care is delivered to a renewed focus on the physician-patient relationship. Here, three Atlanta-area physicians weigh in on what they believe the future of healthcare holds for physicians and patients. Shared decision-making, technology help drive healthy ... Continue Reading
Key Issues Before the State Board of Workers’ Compensation
By Judge Frank R. McKay and Judge Elizabeth D. Gobeil A man fell 18 feet off a roof, crushing both ankles and suffering a fractured lumbar vertebrae and a dislocated left shoulder. While tragic, the silver lining for this individual was that his employer had workers’ compensation insurance, and the prompt medical treatment provided to this worker facilitated a nearly full ... Continue Reading