Abstract

The global COVID-19 pandemic has become one of the largest clinical and operational challenges faced by emergency medicine, and our EDs continue to see increased volumes of infected patients, many of whom are not only ill, but acutely aware and fearful of their circumstances and potential mortality. Given this, there may be no more important time to focus on staff-patient communication and expression of compassion.

However, many of the techniques usually employed by emergency clinicians to provide comfort to patients and their families are made more challenging or impossible by the current circumstances. Geriatric ED patients, who are at increased risk of severe disease, are particularly vulnerable to the effects of isolation.

Despite many challenges, emergency clinicians have at their disposal a myriad of tools that can still be used to express compassion and empathy to their patients. Placing emphasis on using these techniques to maximize humanism in the care of COVID-19 patients during this crisis has the potential to bring improvements to ED patient care well after this pandemic has passed.

Details

Title
Humanism in the Age of COVID-19: Renewing Focus on Communication and Compassion
Author
Sonis, Jonathan D; Kennedy, Maura; Aaronson, Emily L; Baugh, Joshua J; Raja, Ali S; Yun, Brian J; White, Benjamin A
Section
Endemic Infections
Publication year
2020
Publication date
2020
Publisher
University of California Digital Library - eScholarship
ISSN
1936900X
e-ISSN
19369018
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2400365653
Copyright
© 2020. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the associated terms available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/