Literature DB >> 18789627

Shrinking social space in the doctor-modern patient relationship: a review of forces for, and implications of, homologisation.

Stephen Buetow1, Annemarie Jutel, Karen Hoare.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Forces for modernisation appear to have led to role convergence and reduced social distances between doctors and modern patients. This review aims to document and understand this process in theory and practice, and to consider the implications for modern patients in particular but also non-modern patients and doctors.
METHOD: Narrative review of published and grey literature identified from sources including electronic databases, the Internet and reference lists of retrieved works.
RESULTS: Forces for role convergence between doctors and modern patients include consumerism and increased patient literacy; socio-technological changes; values convergence; increased licence for doctors to use their emotions in patient care; and structural changes in the social organisation of health care. As a result, modern patients appear to have gained more in health care than they have lost and more than have the non-modern (or less modern) patients. Doctors have lost authority and autonomy in patient care.
CONCLUSION: The net impulse toward role convergence is, on balance, a positive development. The differential uptake of modernisation by patients has increased health inequalities between modern and non-modern patients. The need of doctors to accommodate these changes has contributed to a form of reprofessonalisation. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: A key challenge is to make available the benefits of modernisation, for example through patient education, to as many patients as possible while minimising the risk of harm. It is important therefore to elucidate and be responsive to patient preferences for modernisation, for example by enlisting the support of the modern patients in overcoming barriers to the modernisation of non-modern patients. There is also a need to support doctors as they redefine their own professional role identity.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18789627     DOI: 10.1016/j.pec.2008.07.053

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Patient Educ Couns        ISSN: 0738-3991


  7 in total

1.  Relational barriers to depression help-seeking in primary care.

Authors:  Richard L Kravitz; Debora A Paterniti; Ronald M Epstein; Aaron B Rochlen; Robert A Bell; Camille Cipri; Erik Fernandez y Garcia; Mitchell D Feldman; Paul Duberstein
Journal:  Patient Educ Couns       Date:  2010-06-08

2.  A word-of-mouth perspective on consumers of family medicine services: a case study.

Authors:  Traian Soare; Ciprian Ianovici; Iuliana-Raluca Gheorghe; Victor Lorin Purcărea; Cristina Maria Soare
Journal:  J Med Life       Date:  2022-05

3.  Why do people purchase antibiotics over-the-counter? A qualitative study with patients, clinicians and dispensers in central, eastern and western Nepal.

Authors:  Bipin Adhikari; Sunil Pokharel; Shristi Raut; Janak Adhikari; Suman Thapa; Kumar Paudel; Narayan G C; Sandesh Neupane; Sanjeev Raj Neupane; Rakesh Yadav; Sirapa Shrestha; Komal Raj Rijal; Sujan B Marahatta; Phaik Yeong Cheah; Christopher Pell
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2021-05

4.  The convivial and the pastoral in patient-doctor relationships: a multi-country study of patient stories of care, choice and medical authority in cancer diagnostic processes.

Authors:  John I MacArtney; Rikke S Andersen; Marlene Malmström; Birgit Rasmussen; Sue Ziebland
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2020-02-26

5.  Surgical patients' use of, and attitudes towards, the internet for e-patient activities in Germany and Oman.

Authors:  Ken Masters; Teresa Loda; Rashid Al-Abri; Jonas Johannink; Anne Herrmann-Werner
Journal:  Ann Med Surg (Lond)       Date:  2020-06-03

6.  Managing incidental genomic findings: legal obligations of clinicians.

Authors:  Ellen Wright Clayton; Susanne Haga; Patricia Kuszler; Emily Bane; Krysta Shutske; Wylie Burke
Journal:  Genet Med       Date:  2013-02-28       Impact factor: 8.822

7.  Physicians' motives for professional internet use and differences in attitudes toward the internet-informed patient, physician-patient communication, and prescribing behavior.

Authors:  Martina Moick; Ralf Terlutter
Journal:  Med 2 0       Date:  2012-07-06
  7 in total

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