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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 12/2020

01-12-2020 | Public Health | Viewpoint

The Doctor-Public Relationship: How Physicians Can Communicate to Foster Resilience and Promote Mental Health During COVID-19

Authors: Mary C. Vance, MD, MSc, Joshua C. Morganstein, MD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 12/2020

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Excerpt

As physicians, we are traditionally taught to diagnose and treat one patient at a time. The doctor-patient relationship, that empathic alliance at the heart of medicine, reflects our abiding commitment to caring for individual patients who are suffering. However, during the COVID-19 pandemic, suffering is occurring on a massive scale that threatens to overwhelm the “one patient at a time” approach. Previous large-scale national disasters, potentially less impactful than COVID-19, resulted in significant mental health costs to society.1 This suggests that the mental health “footprint” of the current pandemic will be far-reaching and long-lasting, and that proactive, preventive public health measures must be taken to address the rapidly evolving, ongoing, and future mental health effects of COVID-19.2
Literature
Metadata
Title
The Doctor-Public Relationship: How Physicians Can Communicate to Foster Resilience and Promote Mental Health During COVID-19
Authors
Mary C. Vance, MD, MSc
Joshua C. Morganstein, MD
Publication date
01-12-2020
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 12/2020
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-020-06243-w

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