T2 - Week 3 Lecture Flashcards

1
Q

What is customer service?

A

A customer’s perspective of the service you provide

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2
Q

What is the importance of customer service in health care?

A
  1. Customers are the most important people in the business that make our job possible
  2. Service affects patient care and outcomes where we solve their problems
  3. Our goal is to exceed the customer’s expectation and fulfill their needs
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3
Q

What is the impact of the 3 C’s of customer service?

A
  1. Prevent problems from occurring
  2. They build rapport with customers
  3. Problems can be handled appropriately
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4
Q

What are some steps for excellent customer service?

A
  1. Know about your organization.
  2. Learn the technical parts of the job.
  3. Be consistent.
  4. Be organized.
  5. Be reliable.
  6. Be responsive.
  7. Greet people as they enter and leave.
  8. Accept and adhere to policies and procedures.
  9. Smile.
  10. Solve problems.
  11. Choose your words carefully.
  12. Make each person feel important.
  13. Build relationships.
  14. Communicate effectively.
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5
Q

How do make a customer feel important?

A
  1. Individual, personalized attention
  2. Respect
  3. Active listening “No problem.”
  4. Caring congruency (words, non-verbals, and actions)
  5. Empathy
  6. Use names
  7. Sincere compliments
  8. Skip the blame, solve the problem.
  9. Golden Rule treatment
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6
Q

What is rule of thumb for customer service?

A

Tell the customer what you can do, not what you can’t do

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7
Q

How do we respond to customer complaints?

A
  1. Service breakdowns happen but how YOU respond makes the difference.
  2. Nothing is more powerful than a sincere apology.
  3. See complaints as an opportunity to improve.
  4. Recognize the problem.
  5. Apologize.
  6. Make things right.
  7. Deal with problems immediately.
  8. Communicate.
  9. Be proactive.
  10. Confirm the problem is resolved.
  11. Do what you said you would do.
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8
Q

How do you deal with difficult people?

A
  1. The problem is the problem, not the person
  2. You can only control you
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9
Q

What are customer service tips?

A
  1. Customers are the most important people in your business.
  2. Make each person feel important.
  3. Think like the customer. Listen.
  4. Use favor language.
  5. Tell patients what you CAN do.
  6. Follow through.
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10
Q

What are communicating pharmacy errors?

A
  1. Apologize.
  2. Do not make excuses.
  3. Build relationships with patients.
  4. Express what you and the company will do to make it right.
  5. Know your company policies and communicate them clearly and compassionately.
  6. Use the word incident rather than mistake or error.
  7. Your first objective is to minimize any potential ill effects for the patient.
  8. Counsel the patient on potential effects of the error.
  9. Move to a private area if possible.
  10. Tell the patient you will check into it thoroughly and follow through.
  11. Document the occurrence and your actions.
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11
Q

What is the purpose of communication with professionals?

A
  1. Positive patient care outcomes
  2. Synergy and collaboration
  3. Recommendations to correct errors or optimize therapy
  4. Receive prescriptions
  5. Medication education
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12
Q

What is the impact of poor communication?

A
  1. 70-80% of serious medical errors are the result of failures in communication
  2. Incomplete communication decreases the quality of patient care
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13
Q

What is transcribing prescription?

A

Converting verbal orders to written orders

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14
Q

What are the barriers to effective transcribing?

A
  1. Interpreting speech
  2. Environmental factors
  3. Knowledge gap
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15
Q

How do you overcome barriers to effective communication?

A
  1. Ask for spelling
  2. Minimize noise when possible
  3. Minimize interruptions
  4. Be a lifelong learner
  5. Use the read back method
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16
Q

What is the read back method?

A
  1. Read back the prescription
  2. Receive confirmation from the person who gave the order
  3. Use with all telephone prescriptions
17
Q

What is read back and verify?

A
  1. Verify each part of the prescription by reading back each piece of information.
  2. As you read back the information, physically place a check mark next to that information.
  3. Ask for spelling if the accent is unclear or you are unfamiliar with the medication.
18
Q

What are the tips of verbal orders?

A
  1. Verify doses with numbers
  2. Verify instructions without abbreviations
  3. Read back the entire order
  4. Reduce orders to writing immediately
  5. Mention dosage form and route
  6. Always use leading zeros
  7. Never use trailing zeros
  8. Double check any Rx that doses more than 2 tabs at one time
  9. Be familiar with LASA drugs and ask for spelling
  10. Ask for more information
  11. Know your patients
  12. Counsel patients, especially on new meds
  13. Ask for diagnosis and quantity dispensed
  14. Have a functional knowledge of medications dispensed
19
Q

What are the components of SBAR?

A
  1. Situation: What going on?
  2. Background: What is the context?
  3. Assessment: What is the problem?
  4. Recommendation: What is the solution?
20
Q

What is SBAR?

A

Allows healthcare professionals to share concise but important information in a short amount of time

21
Q

How do we apply SBAR?

A
  1. Situation: who you are, who the patient is, why you are calling
  2. Background: brief, relevant to the recommendation
  3. Assessment: what you found, what you think
  4. Recommendation: what you want
22
Q

How should we be concise in written communication?

A
  1. Clearly define the problem, patient symptoms/complaints, documented references
  2. Provide specific suggestions to assist the prescriber in acting quickly
  3. Provide recommendations that can be answered with a yes or no
23
Q

What are the components of SOAP note?

A
  1. S = Subjective: Chief complaint; history of present illness; why the patient is being seen;
  2. O = Objective: Physical findings and measurable data such as laboratory values, drug levels, and imaging studies;
  3. A = Assessment: Analysis or conclusion about the patient’s current status/behavior, evidence of progress, response to intervention or medication, and change in functional status;
  4. P = Plan: Interventions or actions taken in response to assessment, collaboration with others, plan for follow-up, change in diagnosis, and documentation that the patient was informed of changes in interventions and/or medications.