Patient- or person-centred practice in medicine? – A review of concepts

African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Patient- or person-centred practice in medicine? – A review of concepts
 
Creator Louw, Jakobus M. Marcus, Tessa S. Hugo, Johannes F.M.
 
Subject Family Medicine person centred practice; patient centred care; ethics
Description Background: Person-centred practice in medicine may provide solutions to several pressing problems in health care, including the cost of services, poor outcomes in chronic care and the rise in litigation. It is also an ethical imperative in itself. However, patient- or person-centred care is not well researched partly because of a lack of conceptual and definitional clarity.Aim: The aim of this review was to analyse essential elements, ethical principles, logic and the practical application of person-centred practice described in clinician- and researcher-defined conceptual frameworks, terms and practices.Methods: A search of review articles on patient- and person-centred care or medicine was conducted using Medline and Google Scholar. Secondary searches were conducted using references and citations from selected articles.Results: Five conceptual frameworks were identified in terms of their practical application of the ethical principles of beneficence, autonomy and justice. They converge around a few central ideas such as having a holistic perspective of patients and their illness experience, a therapeutic alliance between the patient and clinician as well as respectful, enabling collaboration with the patient.Conclusions: Terminological differences appear to owe more to disciplinary origins than to substantive meaning. Beneficence needs to be balanced by and practised through respect for patient autonomy. Core ideas in existing conceptual frameworks of patient or person centredness can guide teaching and research. Considering the value and ethical imperative of person-centred practice, training institutions should train health care students and practitioners in its precepts.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor Department of Family Medicine, University of Pretoria
Date 2017-10-19
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — Review
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/phcfm.v9i1.1455
 
Source African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine; Vol 9, No 1 (2017); 7 pages 2071-2936 2071-2928
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/1455/2296 https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/1455/2295 https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/1455/2297 https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/1455/2287
 
Coverage South Africa 1995-2014 —
Rights Copyright (c) 2017 Jakobus M. Louw, Tessa S. Marcus, Johannes F.M. Hugo https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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