1 / 20

Common dental frustrations and how to overcome them – part three

Common dental frustrations and how to overcome them u2013 part three

VetTimes
Download Presentation

Common dental frustrations and how to overcome them – part three

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Common dental frustrations and how to overcome them: Animals in the early stages of disease Rachel Perry BSc, BVM&S, MANZCVS, Dipl.EVDC, MRCVS European Veterinary Specialist EBVS®, Dentistry RCVS Specialist, Veterinary Dentistry

  2. Does this sound familiar? • During a vaccination consultation you notice the pet has halitosis and the gingivae generally appear inflamed. • There are mild/moderate dental deposits (plaque and calculus) • You suggest that treatment will be needed “before the next booster”

  3. “He needs a dental in 6 months time” • Many vets think they are making a strong recommendation when advising treatment at some time point in the future • Instead, this gives the opposite signal implying treatment isn’t needed • If there’s disease, treatment is required

  4. What is compliance? • Doing what someone demands or asks • Co-operation or obedience Hey, I sat because I wanted to. Not because you told me to.

  5. What is medical compliance? • A patient follows medical advice • Taking medication, making lifestyle or dietary changes Non-compliance costs the USA $100 billion every year

  6. What is veterinary compliance? • The percentage of pets receiving a treatment, or procedure in line with current accepted veterinary healthcare recommendations

  7. Traditional concept of compliance • Very paternalistic • Patient/client is not involved in decision making • Patient/client cannot voice concerns • May be many reasons why patient/client is non-compliant “I feel sick all the time on these tablets”

  8. Paternalistic care • Traditional veterinary medical practice • Vet dominates the encounter • Vet sets agenda and pace • Content biomedical • Client voice diminished

  9. Relationship-centred care • Professional & patient/client discussion • Negotiation to achieve an outcome acceptable to both people • Better outcome

  10. Relationship-centered care • Acknowledge the role the pet plays in the family life • Find out what the client wants and expects • Find out what the client is worried about

  11. Relationship-centered care Significantly associated with increased levels of compliance. A better term for this is therefore ‘concordance’

  12. Making a recommendation • A cross-sectional study of veterinarian-client-patient interactions was performed • Overall, 30% clients adhered to a dental treatment recommendation Kanji et al. Effect of veterinarian-client-patient interactions on client adherence to dentistry and surgery recommendations in companion-animal practice J Am Vet Med Assoc2012;240:427–436

  13. Making a recommendation • The odds of adhering to a clear recommendation were 7 times greater than an ambiguous recommendation • And the client was subsequently more satisfied with the interaction! Kanji et al. Effect of veterinarian-client-patient interactions on client adherence to dentistry and surgery recommendations in companion-animal practice J Am Vet Med Assoc2012;240:427–436

  14. Adherence also more likely with • Empathic and sympathetic tones • No hurried/rushed tones! Kanji et al. Effect of veterinarian-client-patient interactions on client adherence to dentistry and surgery recommendations in companion-animal practice J Am Vet Med Assoc2012;240:427–436

  15. Adherence also more likely with • Longer consultation time (18 minutes) • 5-10 minutes might not be enough Kanji et al. Effect of veterinarian-client-patient interactions on client adherence to dentistry and surgery recommendations in companion-animal practice J Am Vet Med Assoc2012;240:427–436

  16. This study highlights- • Client satisfaction contributes to client adherence • Relationship-centred care contributes to client satisfaction Kanji et al. Effect of veterinarian-client-patient interactions on client adherence to dentistry and surgery recommendations in companion-animal practice J Am Vet Med Assoc2012;240:427–436

  17. Client satisfaction is achieved by • Meeting client expectations • Communicating clearly and effectively • Building a strong relationship with the client and pet • Including the client in the decision-making process • “Do you have any questions or concerns?” Kanji et al. Effect of veterinarian-client-patient interactions on client adherence to dentistry and surgery recommendations in companion-animal practice J Am Vet Med Assoc2012;240:427–436

  18. Establish practice guidelines • All vets in the practice should be making recommendations at the same time-point in the disease process • One vet cannot say “he needs a dental” and another say “it’ll be fine until next year” • All nurses must have the same message • All receptionists must have the same message

  19. Summary • Convincing clients to take action when their pet is in in the early stages of periodontal disease is not easy. • Achieve action by establishing practice guidelines on when to recommend intervention, not delaying intervention ("in 6 months time..") and making a strong recommendation which involves the client in the decision masking process.

More Related