Asked by ty
Why are long-term therapeutic relationships effective in healthcare? Select all that apply.
The patient feels known and valued.
The patient can choose medicine to be prescribed.
The patient’s records are all in one place.
The patient feels comfortable describing symptoms.
The patient can memorize all medical jargon.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Correct answers:
- The patient feels known and valued.
- The patient feels comfortable describing symptoms.
Why:
- Long-term relationships build trust and rapport, so patients feel understood, respected, and more willing to share concerns and sensitive symptoms — which improves diagnosis, adherence, and outcomes.
- The other options are not reliable benefits: patients don't typically "choose" medications (treatment decisions are shared but guided by clinician expertise), having all records in one place isn't guaranteed by a long-term relationship, and memorizing medical jargon is neither necessary nor a benefit of continuity.
- The patient feels known and valued.
- The patient feels comfortable describing symptoms.
Why:
- Long-term relationships build trust and rapport, so patients feel understood, respected, and more willing to share concerns and sensitive symptoms — which improves diagnosis, adherence, and outcomes.
- The other options are not reliable benefits: patients don't typically "choose" medications (treatment decisions are shared but guided by clinician expertise), having all records in one place isn't guaranteed by a long-term relationship, and memorizing medical jargon is neither necessary nor a benefit of continuity.
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