It was interesting to see where audiences fell on the topic-& how it varied across dept's & hospitals. Later published in @JournalGIM where he found that many had done these actions & most approved of those practices (except dinner) https://t.
Finally, some food for thought via an article from @JournalGIM – where are the boundaries for PCPs when it comes to "appropriate" or "inappropriate" patient contact? #SoMe may be "inappropriate," but what else is or isn't? https://t.co/bhXTw1pWoz /fin ht
In @JournalGIM: Authors examine primary care physicians’ practices and attitudes regarding acts that have been questioned as potentially “inappropriate” or “unethical” crossing of professional-patient boundaries. https://t.co/MK25taLmCx
RT @jeffreylinder: Congratulations to @harryreyesnieva from @ColumbiaDBMI and collaborators on "Professional-Patient Boundaries" Physician…
Congratulations to @harryreyesnieva from @ColumbiaDBMI and collaborators on "Professional-Patient Boundaries" Physicians disapprove of dinner with patients. More acceptable? Giving a ride home, paying for meds, help with a job, care for friends. https:
RT @ColumbiaDBMI: Congratulations to first-year PhD student @harryreyesnieva on his 1st first-author paper. https://t.co/WiLhEmuwTC
Congratulations to first-year PhD student @harryreyesnieva on his 1st first-author paper.
The essence of humanism in medicine is caring relationships. Our national survey of PCPs found that the medical profession is divided on appropriate boundaries, though majority found many caring practices acceptable. @BrighamDGIM @harvardmed @ColumbiaDBMI