When I Play, We Heal
Play gives children a space to enact the trauma that they are suffering from. They gain confidence when people accept them the way they are and empathize with them. Generally, children in ward tend to empathize with each other so do their parents. The Children’s Hospital of Aga Khan University (AKU) implemented a play therapy program to better address the needs of hospitalized patients and their caregivers.
Related content
-
Culture & Leadership | Patient Family & Community Engagement
Adapting Rounding Programs Over Time: How Leading Organizations Evolve to Excel
One commonality among organizations excelling at rounding is their proactive approach towards the process. They avoid letting it become stagnant and, instead, show genuine commitment to utilizing rounding to improve outcomes. These organizations understand the importance of evolution and adaptation, continually shaping their rounding practices over time to curate processes that work best for their
Learn more -
Patient Family & Community Engagement | Staff & Provider Engagement
Using Design Thinking Principles to Reduce Healthcare Barriers & Improve Access
This learning bite brings to light the importance of understanding our patients’ barriers in healthcare. Learn how design thinking can be a tool to improve experience. Through the human-centered approach of design thinking, we can integrate the needs of the people into our processes and procedures that create more equitable experiences for those in our
Learn more -
Culture & Leadership | Patient Family & Community Engagement
Crushing Complexity: The Evolving Business of Healthcare
No one can deny the fact that healthcare in the U.S. is complex. But how did we get here? How do patients and caregivers experience that complexity? And are we, in fact, crushing it, or is it crushing us? Based on the study of millions of conversations from all segments of healthcare, this presentation takes
Learn more