Yesterday I read a fascinating blog post by the wonderful Denise Brown, founder of Caregiving.com. Her piece is titled Dressing the Part: Family Caregiver, MD. It argues for caregivers to wear a lab coat when we accompany loved ones to medical appointments. Brown is fed up with clinical professionals not treating family caregivers as the care providers that we are.
I posted Denise's piece on my Facebook page for caregivers and the conversation that ensued was fascinating. Read the exchange.
Karen: I've seriously considered buying some scrubs and a name tag to wear when I take my parents to their appointments. I've wondered if I would be treated differently. I feel like doctors don't know how to include caregivers. Sometimes we're invisible and sometimes we're scolded for not getting our parents to be compliant. Doctors feel they can say things to us that they'd never say to their patients. If we caregivers admit we're having trouble with compliance there is no understanding. "Why isn't she doing her exercises? It shouldn't be that difficult to get her to do it?" There's a tone that's used that isn't used when they're speaking directly to the patient.
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