| Literature DB >> 22524586 |
Lasse Skovgaard1, Liv Bjerre, Niels Haahr, Charlotte Paterson, Laila Launsø, Finn Boesen, Michael Nissen, Mai-Britt Ottesen, Christina Mortensen, Anette Olsen, Søren Borch, Birthe K Mortensen, Gudrun Aa Rasmussen, Kirsten Sietam, Frank Staalkjær, Karin Pedersen, Kirsten Søndermark.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Danish Multiple Sclerosis Society initiated a large-scale bridge building and integrative treatment project to take place from 2004-2010 at a specialized Multiple Sclerosis (MS) hospital. In this project, a team of five conventional health care practitioners and five alternative practitioners was set up to work together in developing and offering individualized treatments to 200 people with MS. The purpose of this paper is to present results from the six year treatment collaboration process regarding the development of an integrative treatment model. DISCUSSION: The collaborative work towards an integrative treatment model for people with MS, involved six steps: 1) Working with an initial model 2) Unfolding the different treatment philosophies 3) Discussing the elements of the Intervention-Mechanism-Context-Outcome-scheme (the IMCO-scheme) 4) Phrasing the common assumptions for an integrative MS program theory 5) Developing the integrative MS program theory 6) Building the integrative MS treatment model. The model includes important elements of the different treatment philosophies represented in the team and thereby describes a common understanding of the complexity of the courses of treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22524586 PMCID: PMC3475037 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6882-12-50
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Complement Altern Med ISSN: 1472-6882 Impact factor: 3.659
Figure 1The first IMCO-model.
Definitions of the four IMCO elements – examples from four practitioners in the team, regarding the same MS patient
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The integrative MS program theory
| - individual diagnostics and treatment efforts | - strengthening the patient’s resources and competences on a physical, an emotional and a cognitive level | - social, cultural, economical and political relations | -clinical effects, independent of the patient’s feedback |
| - involvement of the patient’s goals (and possible modifications of these during the course of treatment) | And thereby | - other treatments used | -experienced outcomes, dependent of the patient’s feedback |
| - coordination of the interventions involved | - initiate and maintain health- promoting processes | - practitioner-settings | Outcomes are obtained through a dynamic process and can therefore not be reduced to the attainment of pre-defined treatment goals |
| | | - the patient’s own effort | |
| - the patient’s motivation |
Figure 2The integrative MS treatment model.