| Literature DB >> 25040366 |
Abstract
The character of medicine has changed over the last 100 years such that medicine is more interested in diseases than the people who suffer from them. Despite notable efforts to address this, the medical humanities do not challenge doctors' fundamental view of the world. Students adopt a metaphysic of physicalism during basic science training that gets carried into medical training. While necessary for medical science, physicalism is insufficient for clinical care. Physicalism offers no foundation for the sine qua non of medicine, the doctor-patient relationship. The character of medicine will not see a renewed interest in humanity until educators address the insufficiency of physicalism for clinical care, and clinicians partner with experts in the humanities to build a sui generis philosophy of medicine.Entities:
Keywords: biomedicalism; clinical judgment; doctor patient relationship; epistemology; humanities; medical humanities; medicine of the whole person; person centered care; personalized medicine; philosophy; physicalism; reductionism; science
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25040366 DOI: 10.1111/jep.12214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Eval Clin Pract ISSN: 1356-1294 Impact factor: 2.431