Literature DB >> 24372285

The pursuit of preventive care for chronic illness: turning healthy people into chronic patients.

Meta J Kreiner1, Linda M Hunt.   

Abstract

Preventive health care has become prominent in clinical medicine in the US, emphasising risk assessment and control, rather than addressing the signs and symptoms of pathology. Current clinical guidelines, reinforced by evidence-based decision aids and quality of care assessment, encourage clinicians to focus on maintaining rigid test thresholds that are based on population norms. While achieving these goals may benefit the total population, this may be of no benefit or even harmful to individual patients. In order to explore how this phenomenon is manifested in clinical care and consider some factors that promote and sustain this trend, we analysed observations of over 100 clinical consultations, and open-ended interviews with 58 primary care clinicians and 70 of their patients. Both clinicians and patients equated at-risk states with illness and viewed the associated interventions not as prevention, but as treatment. This conflation of risk and disease redefines clinical success such that reducing the threat of anticipated future illness requires the acceptance of aggressive treatments and any associated adverse effects in the present. While the expanding emphasis on preventive medicine may improve the health profile of the total population, the implications of these innovations for the wellbeing of individual patients merits careful reconsideration.
© 2013 The Authors. Sociology of Health & Illness © 2013 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness/John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  chronic disease; medical decision-making; pharmaceuticals; preventive medicine; risk

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24372285      PMCID: PMC4074448          DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12115

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  33 in total

1.  Standards of medical care in diabetes--2008.

Authors: 
Journal:  Diabetes Care       Date:  2008-01       Impact factor: 19.112

2.  Glycemic control in type 2 diabetes: time for an evidence-based about-face?

Authors:  Victor M Montori; Mercè Fernández-Balsells
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  2009-04-20       Impact factor: 25.391

3.  Managed fear.

Authors:  Charles Rosenberg
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2009-03-07       Impact factor: 79.321

4.  The concept of prevention: a good idea gone astray?

Authors:  B Starfield; J Hyde; J Gérvas; I Heath
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  2008-07       Impact factor: 3.710

5.  New diabetes HEDIS blood pressure quality measure: potential for overtreatment.

Authors:  Hae Mi Choe; Steven J Bernstein; Connie J Standiford; Rodney A Hayward
Journal:  Am J Manag Care       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 2.229

6.  Prevalence of selected risk behaviors and chronic diseases and conditions-steps communities, United States, 2006-2007.

Authors:  Stella Cory; Ann Ussery-Hall; Shannon Griffin-Blake; Alyssa Easton; Justin Vigeant; Lina Balluz; William Garvin; Kurt Greenlund
Journal:  MMWR Surveill Summ       Date:  2010-09-24

Review 7.  Prehypertension: the rationale for early drug therapy.

Authors:  Flávio Danni Fuchs
Journal:  Cardiovasc Ther       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 3.023

8.  The changing face of chronic illness management in primary care: a qualitative study of underlying influences and unintended outcomes.

Authors:  Linda M Hunt; Meta Kreiner; Howard Brody
Journal:  Ann Fam Med       Date:  2012 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 5.166

Review 9.  Treatment blood pressure targets for hypertension.

Authors:  Jose Agustin Arguedas; Marco I Perez; James M Wright
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2009-07-08

Review 10.  The converged experience of risk and disease.

Authors:  Robert A Aronowitz
Journal:  Milbank Q       Date:  2009-06       Impact factor: 4.911

View more
  7 in total

1.  Racialized Risk in Clinical Care: Clinician Vigilance and Patient Responsibility.

Authors:  Hannah S Bell; Funmi Odumosu; Anna C Martinez-Hume; Heather A Howard; Linda M Hunt
Journal:  Med Anthropol       Date:  2018-06-18

2.  Electronic Health Records and the Disappearing Patient.

Authors:  Linda M Hunt; Hannah S Bell; Allison M Baker; Heather A Howard
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2017-05-16

3.  Diagnosis, narrative identity, and asymptomatic disease.

Authors:  Mary Jean Walker; Wendy A Rogers
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2017-08

4.  The Dangers of Being Old in Rural Tanzania: A Call for Interventions for Strengthening Palliative Care in Low-Income Communities.

Authors:  Kahabi Ganka Isangula
Journal:  Front Aging       Date:  2022-04-25

5.  Identity, community and care in online accounts of hereditary colorectal cancer syndrome.

Authors:  Emily Ross; Tineke Broer; Anne Kerr; Sarah Cunningham-Burley
Journal:  New Genet Soc       Date:  2018-05-02

6.  Deprescribing medications for older adults in the primary care context: A mixed studies review.

Authors:  Robyn J Gillespie; Lindsey Harrison; Judy Mullan
Journal:  Health Sci Rep       Date:  2018-05-10

7.  Patients-in-waiting or chronically healthy individuals? People with elevated cholesterol talk about risk.

Authors:  Mikko Jauho
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2019-01-22
  7 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.