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Meeting
Search Results for Communication
Oral Presentations
Abstract Number: 0012
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Hospitalized patients and their families often face challenges in accessing and understanding developments in care plans, test results, and interdisciplinary decisions made during their stay. This knowledge gap causes anxiety, confusion, and missed opportunities for shared decision-making. Enhanced interdisciplinary communication and transparency with patients positively impacts patient satisfaction, readmission rates, patient safety and adherence [...]
Oral Presentations
Abstract Number: 0012
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Hospitalized patients and their families often face challenges in accessing and understanding developments in care plans, test results, and interdisciplinary decisions made during their stay. This knowledge gap causes anxiety, confusion, and missed opportunities for shared decision-making. Enhanced interdisciplinary communication and transparency with patients positively impacts patient satisfaction, readmission rates, patient safety and adherence [...]
Abstract Number: 0018
SHM Converge 2025
Background: It is challenging for care teams to learn about hospitalized older adults with Alzheimer’s Disease and other related dementias (ADRD). Life stories – interventions that collect patient’s personal narratives, histories, likes and dislikes and share them with care teams – are one innovation developed to enhance person-centered care. Few studies have explored the implementation [...]
Abstract Number: 0049
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Hospitalization is often stressful and confusing for patients and families, and hospitalists play a pivotal role in helping navigate complex treatment plans, integrating multiple consultant and ancillary service recommendations, and providing guidance and reassurance. To achieve this, hospitalists need to quickly develop rapport with patients and families. However, most hospital medicine patients are unable [...]
Abstract Number: 0050
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Recent research highlights that in-hospital communication increasingly is relying on secure electronic messaging with notable unintended consequences, including increasing task switching and the overall burden of communications. This study sought to quantify non-actionable, non-urgent messages to better understand their prevalence and to develop interventions aimed at optimizing communication workflows. Methods: A qualitative content analysis [...]
Abstract Number: 0051
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Rapid recognition of deteriorating patients and efficient physician – nursing communication is essential for patient safety and improved health outcomes (1,2). We conducted a pilot study at a tertiary care academic hospital in September, 2024 with intervention to improve communication between night physicians (nocturnists) and nurses (RN). Methods: At the study site, night shifts last from 7pm-7am [...]
Abstract Number: 0052
SHM Converge 2025
Background: At our institution, bedside co-rounding with physicians and nurses has been promoted as a mechanism to facilitate care team communication. However, coordinating bedside co-rounding can be logistically challenging and time consuming, especially when patients and care team members are not geographically co-localized. Little is known on how bedside co-rounding impacts patient experience. We aimed [...]
Abstract Number: 0053
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Hospital reimbursement for medical necessity is based on the level of care a patient is receiving. In the electronic medical record (EMR), the level of care, inpatient or observation, is determined by a practitioner order or physician certification. The timeliness of this order is of utmost importance, as medical necessity is a dynamic status. [...]
Abstract Number: 0054
SHM Converge 2025
Background: It has long been established that a critical aspect of high-quality patient care is patient-physician communication.1,2 There can be a variety of potential barriers to this communication, and one such barrier might be the use of contact isolation. Indeed, studies have shown that contact isolation does pose the risk of reducing face-to-face time between [...]
Abstract Number: 0057
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Up to 18% of clinic patients are considered difficult by their providers. (1,2) Common characteristics of difficult outpatients are the presence of personality disorders, depression, anxiety, somatization and requesting pain medications. (1,2, 5) Two qualitative studies suggest that inpatient medicine providers also regularly experience hospitalized patients as difficult. (3,4) However, there have been no [...]