Science is gold and talk is king. Telehealth allows healthcare
providers to combine both and reign in a world where staying in touch
and keeping the conversation going are the pillars of care that not
even a pandemic can shake.
Dr Ali Zentner, August 2020
Six months ago, if anyone had asked me how I felt about telehealth,
my response would have been “I hate it”. Admittedly a strong reaction,
but hear me out: I’m not the most tech-savvy person in the world. And
like every doctor, I’m uncomfortable with things I’m not skilled at.
More importantly, I’m a face-to-face kind of person. I prefer analogue
things to digital. And I believe in what I call the “live connection”
between people – whether enjoying a friendly catch-up or trying to
resolve a medical problem. I have studied Motivational Communication
to learn how to read peoples’ physical cues and non-verbal messaging.
I consider the therapeutic effect inseparable from meeting in a
physical space. Five years ago, I built a clinic with a determination
to get everything just right. I wanted it to be clinically sound, safe
and accessible, warm and welcoming – a beautiful place of peace and
healing. I wanted patients to realise instantly that THIS time
treatment would be different. And I wanted healthcare personnel
working there to make sure that it was. I wanted a place that said,
through every carefully managed detail, “You’ve come to a place where
individual health is championed, and where every patient is first and
foremost a person.”
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“I wanted a place that said, through every carefully managed detail,
“You’ve come to a place where individual health is championed, and
where every patient is first and foremost a person.”
Today, the Revolution Medical Clinic in Vancouver, Canada, where I am
Medical Director, is one of the largest multidisciplinary Obesity
Clinics in the country. Run completely under the public socialized
health system, we offer comprehensive obesity treatment to around 5000
patients. We are experts in medical as well as surgical bariatric
approaches. Our staff is composed of 4 Internal Medicine doctors, each
with a specialty in Obesity Management, 3 nurses and 1 dietician. We
are affiliated with Obesity Canada and have been recognized by the
European Association for the Study of Obesity as an International
Centre of Excellence. On a regular day, the clinic would be visited by
50-70 people a day – coming from all over British Columbia. Our happy
space was always busy and buzzing. Our system worked. True to my
belief in face-to-face interactions, I needed to have patients in
front of me first in order to really be effective. After that,
Telehealth options might be relevant for some. And then the pandemic
hit. I came into the office on March 16, 2020, and by March 17 we had
converted all visits to virtual. Going forward, we were going to rely
on our Telehealth video platform and, to a lesser extent, telephone.
Aside from these, we were going to use email.
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“And then the pandemic hit. I came into the office on March 16,
2020, and by March 17 we had converted all visits to virtual.”
We were lucky. To some degree, our clinic had already used technology
for communication for years. We had signed permission to communicate
electronically with our patients all of whom were listed in an
electronic medical record system. We were able to access their records
safely from anywhere. I was surprised how ready we were for this
transition. The building blocks were all there. But it takes more than
technology. For me personally, what I needed to do immediately was
transition my own mind and get fully behind this virtual delivery of
care. But beyond the actual technical set up, something magical was
emerging. I began realizing how the care I was providing was a
revelation. Here we were in the middle of a plague. People were
sequestered in their homes – scared but safe, isolated but together.
And here I was, reaching out to them WHEREVER THEY WERE and just
checking in. If you still don’t see it, then consider that Obesity
Management really is about the conversation. In fact, regardless of
the medical issue, sometimes the most therapeutic thing we can do is
to listen and to connect.
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“Telehealth gave me the ability to work around obstacles and make
myself available to those who needed my attention, wherever they were."
I understood that Telehealth gave me the ability to work around
obstacles and make myself available to those who needed my attention,
wherever they were. In spite of the pandemic, I was able to listen,
support and help people see this through.
Contrary to my prior beliefs, it turned out not to matter whether a
person was in my office, on my computer or in my earpiece. I was their
doctor, the voice on the other end of the line.
My virtual visits are basically conversations with a clinical slant.
They’re not that different from a regular doctor’s visit.
I call up a patient or connect through an online platform and ask
how things are going. I listen, we come up with a plan for treatment
and make arrangements to follow up and check in once again to see how
things are going.
We adjust medication and make a plan. Sometimes that means just
keeping a food diary. Sometimes it means planning to go for a 15
minute walk every day. I counsel on mental health, sleep, emotional
eating etc.
The only diet I put people on is a “news diet”, by which I mean
limiting the amount of news they watch so as to help their mental
well-being. I adjust according to the conversation and the person on
the other end of the line.
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“Telehealth means that I have become a guest in my patients’
homes where arguably they feel safer, more confident and empowered
than in the best of clinics.”
Via online platforms I teach people how to take medications and point
them towards resources on anything from nutrition to COVID-19 updates.
My team has gone to work transforming resources to online platforms
and put together handouts on everything from Emotional Eating to Myths
about Obesity.
We have converted our entire Bariatric Surgery Program into an
online program because we understand that having quick and easy access
to resources makes people feel safe and welcome.
Telehealth means that I have become a guest in my patients’ homes
where arguably they feel safer, more confident and empowered than in
the best of clinics. Rather than come see me for a personal
consultation, they now log in for an office visit from their living
rooms, kitchens and family rooms – the environment where they spend
the majority of their lives.
Inevitably, communicating over the phone or internet can be a bit of
a learning curve. Enabling healing, manifesting empathy and connecting
with people virtually has required me to become a better, more
effective communicator.
As such, I had to learn a new “language”. The visual cues were no
longer as obvious, or even present, in some cases. I learned to listen
for auditory cues, sighs and pauses. I learned where to listen and
where to instruct. I learned to clarify and to connect and to
communicate in a completely different way.
I have always known that communication is EVERYTHING in medicine.
Science is gold, but communication is king. Here in my clinic, we had
both. I was amazed to realize that these principles are even more
apparent in Telemedicine.
Looking back, the key learning is that in many ways Telehealth works
better for Obesity Management than the traditional clinical setting.
As an Obesity physician I treat a population of people who may be
very accustomed to social isolation. A life with symptoms – it really
doesn’t matter which – tends to isolate the person. Obesity is
different from many other diseases in that patients’ symptoms and
diagnosis are visible at all times. As a result, a life with obesity
is all too often a life with discrimination and bias.
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“I had to learn a new language. I learned to listen for auditory
cues, sighs and pauses. I learned where to listen and where to
instruct. I learned to clarify and to connect and to communicate in a
completely different way.
Our society, including people in my profession, has
marginalized people with obesity for far too long. Patients have
been brainwashed to see their disease as their own fault and their
treatment as their responsibility. To WEIGH MORE IS to be judged as
LESS THAN. To this situation, Telehealth offers a great equalizer.
My patients now have less barriers to care than ever before. I can
now come to them and treat them LITERALLY where they are. By
ensuring that the virtual connection is never anything less than the
real thing, optimal healing conditions are within reach. That sums
up the current moment in Obesity Management: We’ve lowered the bar
for access to care and raised it in terms of the quality we deliver.
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2020 has left me deeply impressed with my obesity patients. Even when
faced with a new storm, their grace, humanity, steadfastness and
strength are abundant. When social distancing measures were
introduced, many of my patients had already been socially isolated for
much of their lives. When you’re living with obesity, airplanes,
restaurants and shopping centres are not welcoming. For one unexpected
moment, the rest of the world found itself as locked inside as many of
them had been. But by being remarkable human beings who have learned
the hard way to rise to the occasion against the odds, they would
endure and thrive when everything else seemed bleak and undecided.
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“Looking back, the key learning is that in many ways Telehealth
works better for Obesity Management than the traditional clinical setting.”’
People just want to be well. They want to feel safe, valued and to
know that they matter. Treatment, at its very core, delivers that
message. It means that there is hope and that tomorrow will be better
than today. Having access to that precise message has perhaps never
been more important. What I learned from life under lockdown has now
become my new normal. As I write this I am well into Week 12 of
Telehealth. I have walked more than a thousand kilometres and we have
seen more than 2000 patients. The world is slowly opening back up but
my clinic will continue in the virtual world for a while longer.
Post-COVID-19, our waiting room is too small to ensure my patients’
well-being. Ironically, the space that I worked so hard to make a safe
haven is now a place where they may be exposed to a different threat,
one we never saw coming. And so I will continue to reach out to people
with obesity on their terms and in their own spaces, in order to
preserve our therapeutic alliance without compromising their safety. I
wouldn’t have thought it possible but Telehealth has convinced me that
the best medicine has to offer can sometimes be delivered virtually.
It took a plague to make me realize that it doesn’t matter where the
“seat” is physically located. I’m sure there are areas of medicine
where this isn’t as true, but in the world of Obesity Management
Telehealth is actually perfect.
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“I wouldn’t have thought it possible but Telehealth has convinced me
that the best medicine has to offer can sometimes be delivered
virtually. It took a plague to make me realize that it doesn’t matter
where the “seat” is physically located.
I’ve been a doctor now for more than two decades, and I still
absolutely love with my work. I love that I’m still learning about the
human body, that my career forces me to grow and adjust from minute to
minute and be a little better every day. Most importantly, I love
being an Obesity Doctor because every single day I get to celebrate
and help facilitate the victories of decent, brave, resilient human
beings hoping and working to bring a little more wellness into their
lives. Regardless of the space – in an office, on a treadmill, on a
telephone or an online platform – the view is still gloriously the
same and the privilege continues to be all mine.
These ten questions can help to start a dialogue and take the first
steps towards understanding what treatment options for weight management
are available.
Obesity is a complex disease but treating it does not have to be.
Trained healthcare providers have the knowledge and tools to create a
treatment plan that works for you.
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