The ever-faithful
rising and setting of the Sun in its daily course across the sky is one of the
most beautiful and gloriously magnificent phenomena of nature. From the most
hidden reaches of pre-history, humans have adored the sky-climbing Sun as a God
of fire and life. The earliest scientists began by carefully recording for
centuries its eternal path around the Earth. And even when the religious tone
abated in favor of viewing the Sun as “the greater light to rule the day”, its
stately movement through our skies kept it firmly the focus of intense
scientific investigation.
So, when NikoĊaj
Kopernik (Copernicus) suggested that the most obvious fact about the Sun
was an illusion - that the Sun
does not go around the Earth, but the Earth revolves around the Sun - he
was not believed. In fact, it was such a bizarre suggestion, easily refuted by
anyone who cared to look out the window, that, despite his prestige as a great
scholar and Cardinal of the Catholic Church, almost no one, outside a couple of young disciples and the astronomers and ecclesiastical think tanks in Rome, took him seriously
for a very long time.
Of course, times
have changed. And almost everyone nowadays believes Copernicus’ revolutionary
notion that the Earth goes around the Sun idea is obviously true, an elementary
fact of science, no matter how the sky looks.
As hospital based healthcare providers, we are invited
to participate in a kind of “Copernican revolution” in how we think about our
patients and the care they receive from us. This revolution is not proved by
the laws of physics or astronomy, but it is based in logic and on sound
principles of health and medicine. And it is not a new concept -- we are responding to a call that has been growing for many decades, more than a century. But we have not been taking it seriously, or not in the right way. And yet it is the foundation for rightly understanding our
commitment to patient centered care.
Hospitals are not mere bystanders in the health history of the people we
call “patients”, but they must learn to see themselves as existing for the other. First, then, let us review how the situation looks “out the
window”.
There is no denying
the “obvious fact” that hospitals are the centre of healthcare. Patients who
get sick and need healthcare do wonder whether they will have to go to the
hospital. They go first to their Primary Care physician, to find out. They may not have to go, but the
hospital is always at the centre of gravity in whatever they do to get well. Or
at least that is how it can seem to someone who works in a hospital.
After all, we only
see patients who in fact did have to come to us. The other ones, who do not
come to us, we are sure exist, but we don’t know much about them. Patients who
don’t come to the hospital ... What kind of patient is that? They sound almost
like “escapees”!
If we study a bit
how healthcare is spread throughout our society, we soon learn that hospitals
are not the only institutions that patients have access to. Besides the GPs
mentioned already, there are various kinds of health-related clinics and
offices. There are places that tend to diseases of the eyes, feet, elbows, and waistlines.
There are labs to test almost everything. And there are dozens of “Institutes”,
“Academies” and “Homes” that offer to do things that may or may not actually
help a patient. Many of these may be found in a hospital. Some may have
recently left a hospital setting. Others may be lobbying to be allowed in. A
few are found both in hospitals and spread around the community. But what we
see in the end is the immovably obvious “truth” that, ultimately, whatever the
“exceptions”: patient care revolves around the hospital. Doesn’t that sort of
“egotistical” statement make you feel uneasy?
Of course, hospitals
are only places, where people and equipment are gathered together for the
convenience of the patients. It is the expertise of healthcare providers that
make Hospitals the centre of things. Patients don’t revolve around hospitals,
they revolve around providers. When you put it like that - patients revolve
around providers - the sense of creepiness really intensifies.
None of us, in our
democratic culture that worships autonomy and equality, feels comfortable when
one class of people revolves around another. And I put it this way to make you uncomfortable. It is precisely
this kind of unequal situation that leads to revolutions. And, as health care
workers and providers, you are in a position to make the revolution happen
first. You can make it a conceptual revolution - one that affects attitudes and
influences institutions without leading to protests, confrontations, and
accusations.
We must begin with a reassessment of how
we perceive our relationship, as providers, to those we serve with our
knowledge and skills. By our own values and stated commitments, it is they who
should be at the centre of our activities.