Patient Stories
To truly understand managing health, we need to hear first hand from patients to relate, emphathize and learn how to improve.
Addressing Non-Medical Determinants
- A Physician tells a story of how social determinants drive patient outcomes in two men in their late 30s that live across the street from one another, both in good health with no family history of major illness (8/7/16)
- 39-year-old woman that is nearly blind and unable to walk more than a step or two, struggles to raise three sons while dealing with a daunting array of health conditions from diabetes to pain from bulging spinal disks. A non medical health worker offers to help. (3/9/16)
- Mr. Jones had congestive heart failure, COPD, and a barrage of other chronic health problems. A visit to his home provided insight into why he was going to the ER each week (5/21/15)
- 78-year-old businessman with physical pain needed to address emotional needs first (5/17/14)
Aging In Place
Alcoholism
Behavior
Caregivers
- Bonnie Friedman describes her frustration coordinating her husband's care over many hospitalizations for serious, sometimes life-threatening, illnesses. (1/20/17)
- How the family of 87-year old Ruth Perez's with dementia learned how to take care of their mom (12/12/16)
- Six short videos, each just 3 minutes or less, show what caregiving looks like. (1/2/16)
- A son must decide between caring for his elderly mother or being able to retire one day (11/22/15)
- When a family caregiver becomes injured, she learns the difficulties—and costs—of caring for herself and her chronically ill husband at the same time. (9/2014)
End of Life
- Active 68-year-old man had to suffer through several months of pain before dying. His physician daughter became a proponent for dignity in dying (9/16/16)
- A hospital CEO learns that the standard of care isn't always appropriate when her 94 mother sustained a fall (5/2015)
- A patient dying of cancer was denied home treatment that would have improved her quality of life over her last few days and saved tens of thousands of dollars. (2/11/13)
- A frail, 94-year old women with with advanced Alzheimer’s has hip fracture surgery during her dying days due to poor communications (3/10/13)
Fragmented Healthcare System
Lack of a coordinated, patient centered approach
Disability from Stroke
Geriatricians
Health Insurance Issues
- Corey Michael is a physician that was diagnosed with sleep apnea. He finds it may be easier to buy the continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) device without insurance than going through the extra steps required by his health plan (1/25/17)
- A young professional woman a few years out of graduate school in late twenties with a good job and health insurance unable to maintain her health due to cost and coverage. (6/29/16)
- A man suffers for a week in agony with kidney stones because of insurance access issues to physicians and services (12/11/15)
- Medicare would only pay for an 84-year-old man's infusion therapy at a nursing home ($15,000) rather than at his home ($1,200). (2/23/14)
- A patient suffering from an infected artificial shoulder couldn't afford intravenous antibiotics three times a day for six weeks in home. Medicare spent an unnecessary $30,000 on hospitalization and care rather than reimbursing for home care. (2/23/13)
Health Care Professionals As Patients
- A doctor with a bad knee. "It took me three months of physical torture before I diagnosed my problem: I was suffering from one-size-fits-all medicine." (12/4/16)
- Young Oncology nurse turned cancer patient. "Dear every cancer patient I ever took care of, I’m sorry. I didn’t get it." (11/14/16)
Health Literacy
High-Deductible Health Plans
High-Need, High-Cost Patients
- Forty-year-old Jeremie Seals was assigned a care manager and a regular physician that helped reduced his 15 ER visits and 11 hospitals stays to 4 ER visits and 4 hospitals stays the following year. (7/10/13)
- Virginia Hunt's story illustrates the effectiveness and ineffectiveness of our healthcare system that addresses conditions and often lacks capability to treat the overall patient. (3/3/13)
- Rebecca Bryson has 10 different medical conditions and depends on 13 health care providers. Her life improved when a program funded a Clinical Care Specialist and the creation of a Shared Care Plan. (2006)
Incrementalism in Managing Health
Living Conditions
Living With Chronic Pain
- Toni Bernhard was a law professor. She shared what it is like living one day with chronic pain (12/17/16)
- Angelika Byczkowski was a hard working, high achiever in her 40's had to redefine what is important in her 50's when overcome by pain and diagnosed with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (9/4/16)
- The frustrations of 70 year old woman going from a vibrant lifestyle to be consumed by pain with no solutions other than suffering and addicting opioids. (7/3/16)
Medical Decisions - Quality of Life vs. Aggressive Interventions
- 70-year-old male with deteriorating congestive heart failure. Costly, aggressive route, could have caused more harm than good, comprising quality of life. (9/20/14)
- Vibrant 68-year-old woman from Haiti. She was always impeccably dressed, loved to talk, and had an incredibly infectious laugh. While the condition was cured, she was not. (6/6/16)
Loneliness
Mental Health Treatment
- 16-year-old Joe's mom Amy, struggles to get services for her son (5/31/16)
- Pam and Doug struggle to find care for their young daughter Amanda who is eventually diagnosed with bipolar. Finding available psychiatrist, psychiatric hospital beds and programs were difficult. (3/14/16).
Paying For High Cost Treatments
Patient Goals
- Jack was as a leader in trademark licensing for UCLA. He had been playing golf and running a business prior to admission. His doctor was determined to focus on Jack's quality of life. (10/26/16)
- Patients become people through their social history (8/26/15)
- A doctor discovers an important question patients should be asked. “What are their goals?” (3/9/15)
Primary Care Physicians - Managing Health
Shared Decision Making
- Martha recently retired after 40 years as a business consultant. She has received care from many providers. Her primary care physicians discovers she is on 5 blood pressure medications. (10/24/16)
- It is a good thing the patient did not accept evidence-based recommendations after ovarian cancer treatments. It may have saved her life. (10/5/16)
- Joe is a healthy 85-year-old on just one medicine. His doctors office ordered an unnecessary medicine without a discussion. (3/25/16)
Stress Of Monitoring After Cancer Treatments
Support System Beyond Spouse and Family