Book Read Free

Attending

Page 34

by Ronald Epstein

reflective questions and, 65

  understanding patients and, 52–53, 54, 56

  exquisite empathy, 132

  failure

  beginner’s mind and, 54

  medical errors and, 141–42, 236n4

  organizational mindfulness and, 194

  patients’ sense of, 111–12

  physicians’ reaction to death as, 149, 151, 152

  self-compassion and, 153

  family-of-origin groups, 9, 207, 212n13

  Farber, Stu, 101–2

  Fisher, C. Miller, 35–36

  Fitzgerald, F. Scott, 55

  Fitzgerald, Faith, 37–38, 39, 96

  Fleming, Alexander, 36

  focused attention, 13, 19, 22, 33–34, 167, 183, 200

  focused attention practice, 183, 209–10, 235n28, 241n29

  Fox, Deborah, 170

  Frank, Arthur, 112

  “From Jerusalem to Jericho” (Darley and Batson), 128

  Gage, Phineas, 100

  Gandhi, Mahatma, 70

  Gary (patient), 54–55, 57, 195

  gender differences

  burnout and, 238n4

  physicians’ awareness of patients’ pain and, 227n28

  genetic factors

  biopsychosocial approach to care and, 8

  curiosity propensity and, 48

  resilience and, 165–66

  social environment and expression of, 49, 221n22

  stress hormone expression and, 82

  Glenberg, Arthur, 185

  Glouberman, Sholom, 89–90, 96

  goal-directed attention, 24–25

  Gold Foundation, 199–200

  Granek, Leeat, 150–51, 152

  Grayson, Richard (patient), 85–87, 89–93, 104, 105

  Greece, ancient, 63

  “Guest House, The” (Rumi), 75

  guided meditation, 134, 210, 220n12, 248n2

  Gunderson, Mark, 1–3, 24

  Hagopian, Lena (patient), 3–4

  Halifax, Joan, 129

  Haqim (patient), 71

  Harlow, Harry, 77

  Harper, Ralph, 68

  health care

  compassion versus checklists and industrial models of, 129

  physicians’ inattention to patients and decisions to seek, 20

  quality in. See quality in health care

  social (shared) presence needed in, 77

  health care institutions

  conditions for caring and compassion in, 197–98

  lack of emotional support in, 133

  medical errors in, 139, 141, 143

  mission statements of, 114, 198

  need for sense of community for physicians in, 168

  number of burned-out physicians in, 159–60

  Schwartz Rounds in, 199

  secondary trauma of physicians and, 154, 155

  health care system

  clinician well-being related to health of, 155

  commodification of medicine and, 13

  communication in, 19

  compassionate care rating for, 127

  crisis in, 12–13

  curiosity of physicians and support in, 69

  fragmentation of, 12

  as mindful system, 191–201

  patients distrustful of, 10

  patient suffering worsened by contact with, 113

  quality of care, quality of caring, and physician resilience synergism in, 200–201

  stresses on physicians in, 162, 174

  health records, electronic, 28–29, 141, 158, 161–62, 175

  Hebb, Donald, 178

  high-reliability organizations, mindfulness in, 193–94

  HIV infection, 10, 11, 21, 80, 112, 189

  Hogan, Laura, 69–70

  humors, 63, 232n8

  immaculate perception, 30, 217n27

  inattentional blindness, 17

  inattentional deafness, 17–18, 22

  incidentalomas, 103, 104–5

  Insight Dialogue, 186

  Institute of Medicine, 141, 194

  International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10), 61, 114

  interpersonal mindfulness, 93, 185–86, 214n25

  interruption recovery failure, 23

  intuition

  beginner’s mind and, 54

  diagnosis using, 27, 33, 92, 97, 99–101

  James, Henry, 119

  James, William, 60–61, 92, 181

  “Jerusalem to Jericho” study (Darley and Batson), 128

  Johnson, Douglas, 166

  Just Like Me exercise, 84

  Kabat-Zinn, Jon, 7, 45, 244n16

  Kahneman, Daniel, 19, 97–98

  Karan, Suzie, 146–47, 148, 153, 236n14

  Kashdan, Todd, 47–48

  Kassirer, Jerome, 37

  Kaszniak, Al, 182, 185

  Kearney, Michael, 132

  Keats, John, 223n10

  Kerner, Laura (patient), 74–76

  King, Martin Luther, 70

  Klimecki, Olga, 132–33

  Krasner, Mick, 11, 205, 207, 214n22

  Kübler-Ross, Elisabeth, 122

  Langer, Ellen, 39, 46

  Larson, Eric, 88

  Laszlo, Emil (patient), 15–17, 23, 28, 194–95

  Lesser, Marc, 154, 169

  Lindblom, Charles, 91

  listening. See also deep listening

  dyadic attention training using, 235n28

  examples of doctors using, 71, 89, 104, 149

  inattentional deafness and, 17–18, 22

  learning how to listen, 123–24

  malpractice suits due to lack of, 142

  mindful health care system with, 191–92

  mindfulness during, 244n15

  mindfulness survey on, 214n21

  patient’s validation from being listened to, 127

  presence as quality of, 68, 84

  resilience and ability to change personality traits related to mindfulness in, 167, 175

  silences during, 72, 89

  talking by patients and difficulty in, 21–22

  visual tasks interfering with, 18

  London taxi driver training, and neuroplasticity, 177–78, 179

  Lown, Beth, 127, 199

  Maguire, Eleanor, 178

  Marvel, Kim, 68

  Mary Ann (patient), 90

  Maslach, Christina, 160–61, 171

  Maue, Ken, 29–30, 217n26

  McCallum, Douglas (patient), 5–6

  medical training

  communication skills training in, 131

  connecting Zen perspectives on the inner life with, 8

  culture of, 8

  deep listening training in, 8

  empathy in, 131

  illness experiences and decision to enter, 107–10

  self-awareness training in, 7

  medications. See also pain medications

  mindfulness in prescribing, 197

  patients’ feelings about, 111

  physician burnout and use of, 171

  physicians’ errors with, 140–41, 145

  physicians’ focus on prescribing, 20, 28, 52, 73

  pro-social behavior in prescribing, 132

  utilities and prescribing, 97

  meditation, 116. See also specific practices

  alternate names for, 182–83

  amount of training needed in, 183

  attention training using, 181–82

  benefits of using, 82, 183, 214n21, 235n28

  Buddhist philosophy on, 217n27

  combining practices in, 183

  compassion practice as part of, 134–35

  compassion training using, 132

  distressed clinicians and, 175

  expectations and associations with, 182

  genetic predispositions to disease and, 111

  how to begin, 182–83, 209, 248n2

  immediate emotional reactions to stress and, 82–83

  insight dialogue and, 186

  medical training related to, 9, 11, 13

  military min
d-fitness programs using, 174

  mindfulness and, 244n15

  mindful practice with, 13–14

  posture and, 184

  practicing, 209–10

  purpose of, 183

  reflection and mindfulness program for oncologists using, 152–53

  research on beginner’s mind in, 63–65

  shared etymologies of medicine and, 205

  as skill building, 182, 235n28

  smiling and, 185

  Suzuki on core principles of, 51

  Mehta, Ashwin, 3–5, 7

  Mencken, H. L., 91

  mentalization, 82

  metta, 134

  metta meditation, 134, 210

  Milgram, Stanley, 127–28, 233n6

  military mind-fitness programs, 174

  Miller, Ruth (patient), 148–49, 151

  mind-fitness programs, for soldiers, 174

  mindfulness

  Appreciative Inquiry and, 186

  assessment of physicians’, 213n21

  body scan exercise and, 45

  brain function and structure and changes in, 81, 179

  as a community activity, 168

  curiosity research and, 48

  de-biasing strategies and, 230n26

  decision making and, 98

  description of, 13

  “eight leaps” approach to patients and, 186–90

  emotional reactions to patients’ distress and, 131

  health care organizations’ promotion of, 193

  health care quality and, 196–97, 200–201

  Insight Dialogue and, 186

  interpersonal, in relationships, 93, 185–86, 214n25

  kidney surgery example of lack of, 1–3

  knowing others’ in, 93

  meaning of, 244n15

  neuroimaging research on, 93

  organizations and, 193–96

  patient-doctor interactions and, 10–11

  personal experience of, 13–14

  physicians’ belief in benefits of, 12

  poetry and beginner’s mind in, 64–65

  problem-solving time and, 64

  psychiatrist’s interview example of, 5–6

  reflective questions for, 65

  vascular surgery example of, 3–5

  Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction programs (Kabat-Zinn), 45

  mindfulness meditation (Vipassana training), 209–10, 215n28

  mindfulness training

  benefits of, 183

  brain function response to, 81

  for experienced primary care physicians, 11–12

  medical training with, 200

  for military recruits, 166

  for oncologists, 152–53

  patient ratings related to, 183

  results of, 11–12

  Search Inside Yourself program for, 84

  mindful practice

  attending in, 201

  community involved in, 201

  description of, in medicine, 13

  health care system and, 201

  medical training in, 11, 167, 207

  “Mindful Practice” (Epstein), 10

  mind reading, 93

  mirror neurons, 80–81

  mission statements, 114, 198

  moral distress, 238n3

  Moulton, Carol-Anne, 4, 218n33

  multitasking, 23, 182

  Murthy, Vivek, 159

  music and music performances

  being creative by setting aside preconceived ideas in, 53–54

  being present during, 68, 72, 76

  capacity for awareness and, 29–30, 217n26

  capacity for joy in, 170

  critiques during training for, 180

  expertise and deliberate practice in, 179

  focused attention in, 33–34

  moment-to-moment attention in, 215n28

  practice and preparing for concerts in, 77

  presentness of time in, 70–71

  self-awareness in, 7

  silences in, 72

  National Cancer Institute, 112, 114

  Naval Health Research Center, San Diego, 166

  neuroimaging research, 53, 93, 178, 222n6, 242n36

  neurotransmitters

  curiosity and, 48

  decision making and, 94

  emotion regulation and, 83

  resilience and, 165–66

  “not knowing” stance, 57–58

  oncologists

  patients’ chemotherapy decisions and, 86, 92–93

  reactions to death among, 150–53

  secondary trauma and, 154

  On Presence (Harper), 68

  open awareness, 64, 183, 210

  open awareness practice, 183, 209, 210

  organizational attention, 194

  organizational mindfulness

  health care quality and, 196–97

  principles of, 194–96

  quality in health care and, 196

  organizations

  attention in, 193

  decision making in, 193, 195–96

  mindfulness promotion in, 193

  Trauma Informed Systems (TIS) framework and, 237n24

  Osler, William, 19

  pain

  accuracy of physicians’ estimates of, 52–53

  brain reaction to, 132

  clinicians’ failure to notice, 15, 16, 20, 23, 24, 51–52, 54, 196

  communication between patients and physicians about, 53

  dilemmas in treating, 229n14

  doctor’s illness experiences with, 108, 109, 110

  inability to diagnose long-term, 58, 59

  Just Like Me exercise on, 84

  medical training to recognize symptoms of, 26–27, 31–32, 37, 117, 133, 171, 194–95

  patient’s experience of chronic, 115, 116

  physicians’ biases in treating, 227n28

  physicians’ emotional reaction to, 53, 67, 107, 130, 152, 222n6

  physicians’ sense of shared experience with patients of, 126, 130, 133, 227n29

  suffering related to, 107, 113, 114

  walking with patients to communicate understanding of, 120

  pain medications

  chronic pain and, 116

  communication between patients and physicians about, 53

  differences in prescribing, 227n28

  dilemmas in prescribing, 229n14, 238n3

  physicians’ focus on prescribing, 20, 28, 52, 73

  palliative care, 45–46, 69, 74–75, 91, 113, 122, 148–49

  paranoid schizophrenia, 72–73

  Pedersen, Mary, 170

  peer coaching, 155

  peer counselors, 154

  personal awareness groups, 9, 213n14

  philia (Aristotelian concept), 134

  phronesis (Aristotelian concept), 92, 96

  Porter, Mitch (patient), 149–50

  posture, in Vipassana training, 209

  practical wisdom, 92–93

  pratices. See also specific practices

  choosing, 210

  presence (being present), 67–84, 110

  addressing patients’ needs and, 3

  approaches used in, 67, 68–69, 69–70

  attending and, 201

  attention training and, 182

  bonded resonance in, 68

  boundary situations and, 68

  brain function and, 76–77, 178

  breathing to help, 64

  burnout prevention and, 168

  compassion and, 127

  contemplative practices and, 82

  death and, 151

  deep listening and, 186

  embodied simulation and, 78

  equanimity and, 134

  examples of, 4, 6, 7, 67, 74–76

  feeling helpless and, 117

  grief and, 149, 150, 161

  hospitality and, 75–76

  inner environment of physicians and, 163

  intuitive approach to, 7

  Just Like Me exercise and, 84

 
knowing a patient as a person and, 72–73

  medical errors and, 141, 142

  medical training on, 3

  meditation and, 8, 209

  mindfulness and, 4, 6, 7, 131

  “not like me” patients and, 79, 81

  organizations and, 193, 195

  patients’ reactions to, 68, 70, 71

  pro-social behavior and, 132

  relational mind and, 225n15

  self-care and, 153

  shared, 69, 72, 76, 77, 83–84, 186

  shared mind and, 78

  smiling and, 184

  social, 77

  stillness practice and, 81–83

  theory of mind and, 78

  time and, 70–72

  tribalism and, 79–80

  “where are my feet?” practice and, 83–84

  Principles of Psychology (James), 181

  psychiatrist, mindfulness in interview by, 5–6

  quality in health care

  certainty in care decisions and, 37

  curiosity of physicians and, 49

  health care systems and, 162

  mindful practice and, 11–12, 13

  patients’ concerns about questioning physicians and, 88

  resilience and quality of caring synergistic with, 200

  safety and, 196–97

  quality metrics, 96, 114, 158, 237n2

  quality of caring

  mindful practice and, 11–12

  resilience and quality of care synergistic with, 200

  quality of life, and care decisions, 85, 89, 90, 91, 97, 107, 114, 151

  Quill, Tim, 11, 120, 152

  red exercise, 30–31

  reflection

  deep listening and, 186

  medical training on, 8, 9

  program for oncologists promoting, 152

  stillness and, 82

  reflection-in-action, 65, 213n16

  reflective practice, 213n16

  Reich, Peter, 5–6, 7, 8

  resilience

  biochemical and genetic makeup and, 165–66

  burnout prevention and, 168, 238n4

  exercise and stress to develop, 164

  health care system support of, 192

  leap from well-being to, 187, 189

  mental stability and development of, 166–67

  mindful practice program for, 11, 12

  organizational mindfulness and commitment to, 195–96

  physician burnout and lack of, 162, 163

  quality of care and quality of caring synergistic with, 200

  ten factors in, 165

  training for, 173–74

  trauma survival and, 164

  Zen practice and, 8

  Reyna, Valerie, 40

  Riva, Giuseppe, 76, 225n13

  Rochester, University of, 8, 9, 11, 125, 152, 214n22, 241n25, 247n16

  Rodenbach, Rachel, 151–52

  Rogers, Carl, 213n14

  Rostro, Jane (patient), 26–27, 29

  Rumi, Jellaludin, 61–63, 64, 75

  Ryan, Richard, 165

  Sacks, Oliver, 36

  safety

  confessions project and initiatives in, 148

  efficiency in decisions and, 195

  health care quality and, 196–97

 

‹ Prev