From Fear to Fun - Efficient consultation - Empower patients
This episode explores how to connect with teenagers — a group who are neither children nor adults, and who require a completely different approach in the consultation room. Their brains are rewiring, their emotions feel overwhelming, and their deepest need is to appear independent and in control. We cover: * Why teenagers experience internal instability and protect themselves by acting “cool” * How their craving for independence makes needing a doctor feel like an insult * Why suppressing emotions is their default coping strategy * How to break the ice using humour, honesty, and the “Just be Odd” greeting * Why undermining your own authority helps them relax * How a painted facemask (or any playful oddness) can open the door to connection * How to use the first smile — or the absence of one — to build rapport * How to apply the SCARF model (Status, Certainty, Autonomy, Relatedness, Fairness) specifically for teenagers * Why giving them the upper hand stabilises their self‑image and increases cooperation Key takeaway: Teenagers need connection, autonomy, and dignity. When we meet them with humour, honesty, and the SCARF approach, their defensiveness softens — and the consultation shifts from tension to trust, from fear to fun.
79 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de From Fear to Fun - Efficient consultation - Empower patients!