| Literature DB >> 19232919 |
Ana-Maria Vranceanu1, Cynthia Cooper, David Ring.
Abstract
Increasing data suggest that the traditional clinician-centered or disease-focused, biomedical approach to illness is less effective than a biopsychosocial, evidence-based, patient-centered approach to illness, particularly for chronic pain conditions. This article distinguishes patient-centered care from more traditional and outdated biomedical decision-making models; illustrates the complexity of illness behavior with a patient example; delves into the communication issues raised by this complexity, thereby demonstrating how best evidence can sometimes run counter to biases and intuition; provides a summary of evidence that patient-centered care positively affects outcomes; and explores how the shared decision-making approach along with cultivation of good communication skills can facilitate evidence-based practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19232919 DOI: 10.1016/j.hcl.2008.09.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hand Clin ISSN: 0749-0712 Impact factor: 1.907