| Literature DB >> 10934504 |
Abstract
Since 1987, all patients referred by family physicians for internal medicine consultation at the Institute for Integrative Health Studies (Christchurch, New Zealand) have been assessed by the author from both physical (normative internal medicine) and psychological (psychodynamic, interpersonal, object relations, and self psychological) perspectives. Depending upon the material emerging in each case, the treatment options available for the particular disorder, and patient preferences, many patients have gone on to mind/body oriented discussions or psychotherapy with the author (detailed in Broom 1997), or with one of a team of therapists supervised by the author. This clinical experience, mixing internal medicine and psychotherapy approaches to physical illnesses (with or without organic findings), points to the following: (1) Profound connections between the patients' perceptions of their life-events and experience and the development of illness in both organic and nonorganic illnesses; (2) a rich fund of information in the patients' verbal language about the meaning of the illnesses; (3) the crucial importance of clinical attunement to macro- and micro-life events surrounding symptom emergence; and (4) the decisive role a clinician's implicit paradigm of "personhood" plays in patient care. This paper broadly outlines the presuppositions for this integrative clinical approach, and illustrates the approach with case material. Additionally, it summarizes the kinds of listening, and other skills, that have proved clinically useful. In all, the material illustrates that a combination of orthodox biomedical approaches and a "story approach" (which focuses on meaning leading to illness) offers considerable potential benefits to patients with physical symptomatologies including those with organic findings. Copyright 2000 John E. Fetzer Institute.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2000 PMID: 10934504 DOI: 10.1054/ambm.2000.0186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mind Body Med ISSN: 1470-3556