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Everything We Say and Do: Hospitalists are leaders in designing inpatient experience
Editor’s note: “Everything We Say and Do” is an informational series developed by SHM’s Patient Experience Committee to provide readers with thoughtful and actionable communication tactics that have great potential to positively affect patients’ experience of care. This column highlights key takeaways from the SHM track of the upcoming 2017 Cleveland Clinic Patient Experience Empathy and Innovation Summit, May 22-24. Three hospitalist leaders describe their approach to leading the design of the inpatient experience.
What we say and do, and why
Like many forms of care improvement, we have found that health care providers and patients alike engage most proactively when they are directly involved in codesigning an approach or intervention for improving the experience of care. Here are some examples of how hospitalists can be effective leaders in cocreating the inpatient experience with patients and interdisciplinary colleagues.
Dr. Sliwka is medical director of patient and provider experience at University of California, San Francisco, Health; Dr. Kneeland is medical director for patient and provider experience at University of Colorado, Aurora, Hospital; Dr. Hoffman is medical director for patient relations at University of Wisconsin-Madison, Health.
Editor’s note: “Everything We Say and Do” is an informational series developed by SHM’s Patient Experience Committee to provide readers with thoughtful and actionable communication tactics that have great potential to positively affect patients’ experience of care. This column highlights key takeaways from the SHM track of the upcoming 2017 Cleveland Clinic Patient Experience Empathy and Innovation Summit, May 22-24. Three hospitalist leaders describe their approach to leading the design of the inpatient experience.
What we say and do, and why
Like many forms of care improvement, we have found that health care providers and patients alike engage most proactively when they are directly involved in codesigning an approach or intervention for improving the experience of care. Here are some examples of how hospitalists can be effective leaders in cocreating the inpatient experience with patients and interdisciplinary colleagues.
Dr. Sliwka is medical director of patient and provider experience at University of California, San Francisco, Health; Dr. Kneeland is medical director for patient and provider experience at University of Colorado, Aurora, Hospital; Dr. Hoffman is medical director for patient relations at University of Wisconsin-Madison, Health.
Editor’s note: “Everything We Say and Do” is an informational series developed by SHM’s Patient Experience Committee to provide readers with thoughtful and actionable communication tactics that have great potential to positively affect patients’ experience of care. This column highlights key takeaways from the SHM track of the upcoming 2017 Cleveland Clinic Patient Experience Empathy and Innovation Summit, May 22-24. Three hospitalist leaders describe their approach to leading the design of the inpatient experience.
What we say and do, and why
Like many forms of care improvement, we have found that health care providers and patients alike engage most proactively when they are directly involved in codesigning an approach or intervention for improving the experience of care. Here are some examples of how hospitalists can be effective leaders in cocreating the inpatient experience with patients and interdisciplinary colleagues.
Dr. Sliwka is medical director of patient and provider experience at University of California, San Francisco, Health; Dr. Kneeland is medical director for patient and provider experience at University of Colorado, Aurora, Hospital; Dr. Hoffman is medical director for patient relations at University of Wisconsin-Madison, Health.