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EDITOR The work of W R Miller, for example, has shown that the more
confrontational (non-empathic, non-patient centred) the clinician the
poorer the outcome. Previously, poor outcomes were taken as a sign of
the patient's denial or unwillingness to change Working with patients with alcohol and other drug problems, we often
meet people who are very sick and who occasionally die from violence,
overdose, or organ failure over the ensuing days or weeks. With respect
to outcomes, it is a discipline as serious as any other. But we do not
delude ourselves that we can do much more than attempt briefly to enter
another person's world and possibly help make some positive changes if
they wish. All health training and undergraduate programmes should
incorporate significant exposure to the management of people who have
problems with alcohol and other drugs, as a means to understand the
person centred approach.
Stewart's summary of and enthusiasm for a patient centred
approach is most welcome.1 I believe that one additional feature of this approach should be added
namely, that it acknowledges the reality of patients accepting or rejecting our advice or treatment. Clinicians working with patients with alcohol and other drug problems, particularly those working in the harm reduction model, have known this
for years.
now most clinicians
(those working in the field of alcohol and other drug problems, at
least) accept that these problems usually represent failure on the part
of the therapist. The increasing evidence that most humans do not
always "comply" with our treatments must surely make us as doctors
more keen to enter our patients' world and mindset as a clinical
priority, at least if we wish to achieve good health outcomes.
Stewart's point, that the fact that some may not prefer a patient
centred approach constitutes a false objection, is most important,
since any clinician who rigidly adheres to any model as taught is, by
definition, model centred, not patient centred.
Orange, 2800, NSW, Australia randjmac{at}ix.net.au
| 1. |
Stewart M.
Towards a global definition of patient centred care.
BMJ
2000;
322:
444-445 |