The Power Of A Physician’s Touch – A Sure Path To Better Patient Trust, Outcomes And Satisfaction

My wife has two world-class oncologists who help her manage her Stage 4 Lung Cancer.  Both are excellent clinicians.  Yet their skills differ in one very important way.  Her radiation oncologist physically touches her a lot (in a good way of course!).  There are the touches on her arm, a hand on the shoulder, hugs, and of course a thorough hands-on physician exam.  Her medical oncologist is just the opposite…not so much.

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We all recognize the therapeutic value of touch.  Dr. Abraham Verghese, a Stanford Physician, Professor and Author describes “the power of laying on hands ” during the physical exam portion of the office visit in his 2012 TED Talk associated with the In the following scenario he describes an interaction with a chronic fatigue patient who came to him after being seen by many other physicians.

The patient was very voluble and kept talking as I began the physical.  I always begin my routine, my ritual with the patient’s hands…it seems natural to hold the hands.   I slip my figure to the radial pulse and then examine the fingers looking for cyanosis and clubbing….  As I began my routine, this talkative patient began to quiet down.   I had an eerie sense that the patient and I had slipped back into a primitive ritual…one in which I had a role and the patient had a role.

When I was done the patient said to me with some awe…I have never been examined like this before.   If this were true that was unfortunate since this patient had been examined by other physicians many times before.   Following the exam, I told the patient the same thing he had been told by other physicians, I don’t know what the problem is …but here’s what we will do.  I had earned the right to tell the patient this because of the examination.

Verghese believed that, unlike the other physicians seen by the patient, he had earned the right to diagnose the patient and expect the patient to accept and act on his findings.  Why? Because of the patient trust he had earned in part through the power of touch.

Turns out that there is scientific research to back up Verghese’s claim.  According to researchers, people are able to more accurately discern a wider range of feelings and emotion from touch than from gestures, expressions, and sometimes even words.  That’s because touch is the first language we learn.  Tiffany Field, PhD of the Touch Research Institute in Miami has found that benefits of touch seem to stem largely from its ability to reduce levels of cortisol, a stress hormone manufactured by the body.

Given the high degree of personal stress associated with a trip to the doctor, a lab test, or hospital visit, I suspect we could use a whole lot more touching…not less as is the trend.  Verghese has a name for this trend – you know where clinicians gather around the computer and not the patient.  He calls it iMedicine….and it’s not a good thing.

That’s my opinion…what’s yours?

Source:

Keltner, D. Born To Be Good: The Science of a Meaningful Life” (Norton, 2009)

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5 Comments

  1. Carolyn Thomas

    Thanks Stephen for this post and the link to this must-see video. Should be required viewing for all health care professionals, right up there with this post from Dr. James Asante called “The Art of Medicine and the Power of Human Touch”, a profoundly moving and compelling essay. http://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2011/08/art-medicine-power-human-touch.html As a heart patient, I only wish that all of us had more docs like Asante and Verghese.
    Cheers,
    C.

  2. Airedalelover

    How interesting. My radiation oncologist starts and ends our meetings with a warm handshake and he listens to me. When he comes to check on me before my treatment, he will put his hand on my arm or shoulder by way of greeting and connecting. My medical oncologist hugged me not too long ago, I think she knew the results of surgery I faced were going to be, and were indeed not good. This is my second radiation oncologist. The first was very warm and reassuring as well. Do they get training for this to balance out their uber scientific side?

  3. Amanda Jane

    I have a condition where I am constantly in pain everywhere. The worst thing for my care is a doctor’s touch, or any comforting touch from anyone. I will only even hug or touch my own family on the days with my lowest pain levels. We advise every health care provider about my condition and how it causes me pain all over–from triage nurses to ultrasound and EKG techs to doctors–so that they will not touch me as a source of comfort and understand why they should not do this and to only touch me as part of exams with warning and acknowledgement from me to proceed.

    The results of our efforts to inform and prevent painful touch have been pretty mixed. Even the pain management specialist who said I was too special and she had to refer me to a university specialist in a big city insisted I shake her hand at the end of our consultation after she had examined and seen how much pain I have in my hands. Please listen to and respect patients and also ask whether or not we are comfortable with being touched. Some of us are not!

    • Stephen Wilkins

      Amanda,

      Thanks for informing the rest of us about situations like yours.

      Steve Wilkins

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