Literature DB >> 20029748

Clinical community health: revisiting "the community as patient".

D S Blumenthal1.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: A little over fifty years ago, Edward McGavran, Dean of the University of North Carolina School of Public Health, articulated the concept of treating the community as if it were a patient. Although McGavran was addressing public health practitioners, the concept has applicability in academic medicine and reflects contemporary thought in patient care, research, and education. The goals of this paper are (1) to present a framework through which clinicians can conceptualize the community as an appropriate level of intervention to improve health, to conduct research and to educate students, and (2) to illustrate the framework by presenting information on how programs at Morehouse School of Medicine have used it to organize community-focused initiatives. The concept may be called Clinical Community Health. CLINICAL COMMUNITY HEALTH AND ITS APPLICATIONS AT MOREHOUSE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE: Health problems of communities are more readily understood by clinicians when analyzed in the same way that clinicians analyze the health problems of individual patients: by gathering subjective and objective data, formulating an assessment that is expressed as a problem list, and developing a plan ("SOAP"). The plan is created in consultation with the community, much as a modern physician engages in shared decision-making with a patient rather than issuing "doctor's orders." Similarly, community-based participatory research creates a relationship between the researcher and the community that parallels the relationship between the researcher and the individual research participant in traditional clinical research. When viewed through this lens, the education of students in the community resembles the education of students in the hospital or clinic--both are a type of service-learning. Hence, the community work of faculty is best evaluated and rewarded in a fashion that parallels evaluation of faculty work in the clinic or hospital. This paper reports on our experiences at Morehouse School of Medicine (MSM), a historically black institution in the United States whose mission focuses on primary care and the health of the underserved. We report on our efforts to apply the model in service, research, and education.
CONCLUSION: Viewing the community as a patient provides a useful conceptual framework for primary care physicians and other clinicians, since it allows them to recognize that it is not necessary to learn a different conceptual framework to diagnose and treat the community; rather, one can think of the community as a patient and apply a similar approach to that used in the care of individuals.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 20029748      PMCID: PMC4527153     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Educ Health (Abingdon)        ISSN: 1357-6283


  12 in total

1.  Evaluation of an innovative approach to community-based medical undergraduate education in Nigeria.

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Journal:  Educ Health (Abingdon)       Date:  2002

2.  Scientific diagnosis and treatment of the community as a patient.

Authors:  E G MCGAVRAN
Journal:  J Am Med Assoc       Date:  1956-10-20

3.  Towards unity for health utilising community-oriented primary care in education and practice.

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Journal:  Educ Health (Abingdon)       Date:  2007-08-25

4.  Acquaintance with the actuality: community diagnosis programme of Kathmandu Medical College at Gundu village, Bhaktapur, Nepal.

Authors:  A Vaidya; A Pradhan; S K Joshi; S Gopalakrishnan; I Dudani
Journal:  Kathmandu Univ Med J (KUMJ)       Date:  2008 Jan-Mar

Review 5.  Review of community-based research: assessing partnership approaches to improve public health.

Authors:  B A Israel; A J Schulz; E A Parker; A B Becker
Journal:  Annu Rev Public Health       Date:  1998       Impact factor: 21.981

6.  Service-learning: community-campus partnerships for health professions education.

Authors:  S D Seifer
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  1998-03       Impact factor: 6.893

7.  Community organization and development for health promotion within an urban black community: a conceptual model.

Authors:  R L Braithwaite; F Murphy; N Lythcott; D S Blumenthal
Journal:  Health Educ       Date:  1989-12

8.  Medical records that guide and teach.

Authors:  L L Weed
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1968-03-14       Impact factor: 91.245

9.  An interdisciplinary community diagnosis experience in an undergraduate medical curriculum: development at Ghent University.

Authors:  Bruno Art; Leen De Roo; Sara Willems; Jan De Maeseneer
Journal:  Acad Med       Date:  2008-07       Impact factor: 6.893

10.  Promoting translational and clinical science: the critical role of medical schools and teaching hospitals.

Authors:  Howard B Dickler; David Korn; Steven G Gabbe
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2006-09       Impact factor: 11.069

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  2 in total

Review 1.  Patient- and Community-Oriented Primary Care Approaches for Health in Rural, Remote and Resource-Dependent Places: Insights for Eco-Social Praxis.

Authors:  Chris G Buse; Sandra Allison; Donald C Cole; Raina Fumerton; Margot Winifred Parkes; Robert F Woollard
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2.  Experiencing and designing community-based medicine - development and evaluation of an elective based on explorative learning.

Authors:  Wolfram J Herrmann; Sabine Gehrke-Beck; Christoph Heintze
Journal:  GMS J Med Educ       Date:  2019-11-15
  2 in total

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