| Literature DB >> 23294526 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient-centered medicine is developing alongside the concepts of personalized medicine and tailored therapeutics. The main objective of patient-centered medicine is to improve health outcomes of individual patients in everyday clinical practice, taking into account the patient's objectives, preferences, values as well as the available economic resources. DISCUSSION: Patient-centered medicine implies a paradigm shift in the relationship between doctors and patients, but also requires the development of patient-oriented research. Patient-oriented research should not be based on the evaluation of medical interventions in the average patient, but on the identification of the best intervention for every individual patient, the study of heterogeneity and the assignment of greater value to observations and exceptions. The development of information-based technologies can help to close the gap between clinical research and clinical practice, a fundamental step for any advance in this field.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23294526 PMCID: PMC3575265 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-13-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Characteristics of the traditional medical model and patient-centered medicine
| Provider-centered model | Patient-centered model |
| Founded on the principles of beneficence and authoritarianism | Founded on the principle of autonomy |
| Disease-oriented care | Patient-oriented care |
| Focuses on outcomes of importance for physicians and regulators | Focuses on outcomes of importance for patients |
| The patient’s perspective is usually ignored | The patient’s preferences, objectives and values are taken into account during decision making and delivery of healthcare |
| Compliance with the physician’s decisions | The patient and physician share decision making |
| Improve outcomes for the average patient | Improve outcomes for the individual patient |
| Population-oriented research | Patient-oriented research |
Characteristics of population- and patient-oriented research
| Paradigm: Randomized clinical trials | No paradigm: observational and experimental research |
| Focuses on the “generalization” of results | Focuses on the “individualization” of results |
| Efficacy in average patients | Effectiveness in subgroups of patients and individual patients |
| Absolute efficacy | Comparative effectiveness |
| Identify the percentage of patients who will respond to an intervention | Identify which options are more effective for which patients |
| Evaluation of interventions | Evaluation of patients and their diseases |
| Analysis of homogeneity | Analysis of heterogeneity |
| Subgroups identified | |
| Aggregation: the study of commonalities | Disaggregation: the study of differences |
| Inductive logic | Hypothetic-deductive logic |
| Exploratory observations and confirmatory trials | Exploratory trials and confirmatory observations |
| Minimizes the value of observations, exceptions, and case series | Assigns greater value to observations, exceptions, and case series |
| Distinction between clinical practice and research | Integration of clinical practice and research |
| From bench-to-bedside | From bedside-to-bench |
| Evidence-based medicine | Medicine-based evidence |