Stimulus | Helping Doctors overcome burnout, excel in leadership, and unlock their most fulfilling careers

89. The Drunk Whisperer | Verbal de-escalation for the agitated, upset, and unruly

10.10.2022 - By Rob Orman, MDPlay

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Verbal de-escalation is a tool that can be learned by almost anyone. In this episode, we learn from two masters in the art of de-escalating those who are agitated and upset:  Jose Pacheco, RN, known affectionately to his co-workers as ‘The Drunk Whisperer’,  and Dan McCollum, MD,  emergency physician at Augusta University. The core of this conversation hinges around an approach to conflict resolution that evolved from the martial arts principle of using your opponent’s energy to resolve conflict, rather than simply butting heads. The name for this method? Verbal Judo. A proviso to all of this is that if the room/scene needs to be safe. Your top priority is to keep yourself and your team safe. Do not put yourself at risk. That doesn’t always mean physical escalation (though sometimes it does), it can simply mean removing yourself from the physical space of the escalating situation.  Awake and Aware | Our 2024 Live Event Join us at Awake and Aware 2024, a transformative 3-day workshop from May 1st to 3rd in Bend, Oregon. Mitigate stress and stay cool under pressure. Create the mindset you want and lock it in. Limited slots. Website: Awakeandawarebend.com 16.25 Hours Category 1 AMA CME The Flameproof CourseCohorts 1 and 2 sold out. Cohort 3 begins Sept 10, 2024. This is the hidden anti-burnout curriculum we all should have learned in training. Get the deets Out on TimeStay out of chart debt. Document like a legend. Get home on time! Begins August 15, 2024. Learn more here For full show notes of this episode and all sorts of other goodies, visit our podcast website We discuss:Jose Pacheco's tactics to de-escalate and defuse agitated patients in the emergency department [03:13];Dan McCollum’s de-escalation sequence based on needs of the situation [09:30];The unifying principle of verbal judo: Empathy absorbs tension [15:50];Present the professional image [22:50];The Universal Upset Patient Protocol [24:20];“We treat people as ladies and gentlemen not because they are, but because we are.” [35:50];You can’t control how an upset person is going to respond to conflict, you can only control how you respond. [36:40];Seeing a situation from the other person’s eyes. [37:50];Sword of Insertion technique aka How to politely interrupt [38:20];Active listening [40:50];Tips for interacting with difficult patients in the ED. [42:30];Non-verbal cues [53:30].

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