| Literature DB >> 17346340 |
Eva Lena Strandberg1, Ingvar Ovhed, Lars Borgquist, Susan Wilhelmsson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The definition of primary care varies between countries. Swedish primary care has developed from a philosophic viewpoint based on quality, accessibility, continuity, co-operation and a holistic view. The meaning of holism in international literature differs between medicine and nursing. The question is, if the difference is due to different educational traditions. Due to the uncertainties in defining holism and a holistic view we wished to study, in depth, how holism is perceived by doctors and nurses in their clinical work. Thus, the aim was to explore the perceived meaning of a holistic view among general practitioners (GPs) and district nurses (DNs).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17346340 PMCID: PMC1828160 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-8-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Categories and subcategories from the content analysis
| Category | Subcategory |
| Attitude | Professional attitude |
| Political/administrative attitude | |
| Knowledge | Factual knowledge |
| Tacit knowledge | |
| Circumstances | Motivating factor |
| Organisation | |
| Sphere of activity | |
| Tool |
Category 'attitude' and quotations of the subcategories 'professional attitude' and 'political/administrative attitude'
| "In this connection a comprehensive view is an attitude that enables one to cover many dimensions in an illness or sickness, it's not necessary to have all the information – a comprehensive view does not mean that one has a lot more information" |
| "I think it 's like a floating spirit that one has a kind of feeling about" |
| "For me a comprehensive view is the opposite to a partial view, it's not just giving health care, it's all about not only being an ear specialist or not only being a psychiatrist or not only an orthopaedist and seeing only those problems but it is the comprehensive view" |
| "We have like two conceptions, one including society and one about the whole person where you see not only the patient's wound but all other parts as well and that both body and soul in some way should feel all right. From there you make your professional decisions" |
| "Yes, I must say that I have had a bit of a problem with this concept, a comprehensive view, because I have always thought of it as a prestigious word. I have never ever felt that I work with a comprehensive view, and when someone stands up and says that now we are going to work with a comprehensive view, then it has been a kind of, well bombastic talk from the director." |
Category 'knowledge' and quotations of the subcategories 'factual knowledge' and 'tacit knowledge'
| "of course it is of great importance, we are skilled in it" |
| "I don't think that we have so many regular meetings with physiotherapists and occupational therapists so it is not so important for me to get any extra information as most of it I have taken in throughout the years" |
| "without it there would be no primary care" |
| "it's just there" |
Category 'circumstances' and quotations of the subcategories 'motivating factor', 'organisation', 'sphere of activity' and 'tool'
| "It's just that which is the charm of the job" |
| "It's that which makes everything else meaningful, to have a comprehensive view" |
| "and therefore I think that really having separate districts is good, if you want to see the entirety" |
| "For me it is just when you come home to the elderly and so on that one sees not only the person, and they have been in contact with you earlier, but one sees the whole person, how they live" |
| "I think that it is a little bit dangerous to say that we should specialise. GPs are not specialists. They have a general doctor's competence and I think that we as district nurses have a general nurse's competence or whatever we can call it, it is what we are trained as" |
| "in preventive work I see a comprehensive view, how we can prevent more, it is in primary care where I see it, the comprehensive view" |
| "There is the consultation, communication so to say, also a way to come to insight and to see for yourself . . . the comprehensive view of a situation, we need a tool really to draw this out" |