• Poor Communication: Patients’ perceptions of the quality of the healthcare they received are highly dependent on the quality of the interactions of their healthcare clinician and team. Health care workers today acknowledge that poor communication is perhaps one of the most prevalent problems in hospitals or Health and Social care settings. Poor communication, tends to evolve out of the inevitable and irreversible hierarchy of power within hospitals, within in the society of professionals that are supposed work together for the betterment of the environment and patients. Given that both physicians and nurses are intimately involved in the care and support of the patients, major …show more content…
Even though different professionals have similar but different professions, the foundation knowledge should be equal. However, sometimes professionals may rival in the fact that one knows more than the other and refuse to share information for their own benefit and satisfaction, in which is wrong and should not happen. Circumstances may arise in which a patient cannot be informed about the disclosure of information, for example in an emergency. In such a case you should pass relevant information promptly to those providing the patient’s care, the professionals should all be willing to participate for the sake of the Person. And when confidential information within the team is passed around, not one person should feel obliged above others to take responsibility for it, but rather, it should be all professionals. However this is a difficulty when a professional feels as if they are most superior because of age or others, to take on the job without letting the team know why, through not sharing appropriate information with them. Especially in Health and Social Care settings, Information sharing should be vast and not disclosed for a certain professional, as a result of the problems that are already surfaced and need to be dealt