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Dealing with Difficult People in the Healthcare Industry
How to effectively communicate with patients, colleagues, and healthcare personnel


The healthcare environment will always be extremely challenging, but you can change the way you approach it. Learn the skills that will allow you and your co-workers to go back to work with a fresh outlook and make it possible for you to experience a return to the sense of fulfillment, satisfaction, and empathy that brought you into the healthcare field in the first place.

This seminar equips you with the strategies and communication skills you need to survive and thrive in your demanding, high-stress healthcare position.

In one day, you and your staff will learn to ...

  • Be sensitive to the reasons difficult people act the way they do
  • Gain the trust of patients — even those who initially don't want to put their faith in you 
  • Set limits without creating barriers for patients, managers, and staff members 
  • Bring out the best in even the most trying personalities
  • Maintain your composure and control — even when someone gets "in your face"
  • Cool down heated situations and put patients and families at ease
  • Win people over with your newly acquired non-verbal skills

Who will benefit most?

    Nurses and nurse aids
    Physicians
    Office managers and staff
    Clinical technicians
    Hospice workers
    Nursing home employees
    Anyone who works in healthcare!

Key learning points:

    Why no one — not even the most trying person — can make you feel hurt. Learn how you can choose positive, productive emotional responses
    The unique challenges of negotiating in a medical environment
    Techniques that provide insight into your difficult person's motivators
    How to recognize when you are being a difficult person
    The secret to maintaining emotional composure in the presence of an irate person
    How to make others feel valued, important, and comfortable — even when they are ill
    What you can do — without saying a word — to demonstrate your interest to a speaker
    The kind of feedback that brings the best — and fastest — results
    Specific techniques to help you stay calm under attack

 

Program Overview

Understand what makes difficult people tick

    Why complainers complain — and how to move them quickly into problem-solving mode
    How to read and interpret other people's body language — what are they really saying? 
    The "wrong side of the bed" syndrome — why some people start out badly and just get worse as the day goes on

Bring out the best in all kinds of people

    How to interpret odd behavior in a healthcare setting
    How (and why) you can fix only situations — not people
    3 ways to increase your personal diplomacy skills so you positively affect negative situations and people

Improve your listening and non-verbal skills

    How to listen for what is not being said, but implied, by a problem person
    "Charging Rhinos" — how to keep these loudmouths from dominating conversations
    Simple reminders that help you stay attentive to the person talking

Project poise and confidence, regardless of how you feel inside 

    Your most powerful and effective response to sarcasm
    How to use positive language to steer conversations with difficult people in a more productive direction
    Ways to say "no" and stand your ground without alienating colleagues or patients
    How to increase your personal strength through flexibility

Communicate more effectively, credibly, and assertively 

    The first and best thing you can do when patients or colleagues blow their tops
    How to respond to put-downs — keep your self-esteem intact without making the situation worse 
    5 easy steps that cut through anxiety and tension — and get your point across
    How to re-establish trust when the staff has "blown it" with a patient

 

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