Literature DB >> 25643756

The Re-contextualization of the Patient: What Home Health Care Can Teach Us About Medical Decision-Making.

Erica K Salter1.   

Abstract

This article examines the role of context in the development and deployment of standards of medical decision-making. First, it demonstrates that bioethics, and our dominant standards of medical decision-making, developed out of a specific historical and philosophical environment that prioritized technology over the person, standardization over particularity, individuality over relationship and rationality over other forms of knowing. These forces de-contextualize the patient and encourage decision-making that conforms to the unnatural and contrived environment of the hospital. The article then explores several important differences between the home health care and acute care settings. Finally, it argues that the personalized, embedded, relational and idiosyncratic nature of the home is actually a much more accurate reflection of the context in which real people make real decisions. Thus, we should work to "re-contextualize" patients, in order that they might be better equipped to make decisions that harmonize with their real lives.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25643756     DOI: 10.1007/s10730-015-9268-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  HEC Forum        ISSN: 0956-2737


  15 in total

1.  Aging in place in assisted living: philosophy versus policy.

Authors:  R Chapin; D Dobbs-Kepper
Journal:  Gerontologist       Date:  2001-02

2.  The emergence of medical specialization in the nineteenth century.

Authors:  George Weisz
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 1.314

3.  The home as a site for long-term care: meanings and management of bodies and spaces.

Authors:  Isabel Dyck; Pia Kontos; Jan Angus; Patricia McKeever
Journal:  Health Place       Date:  2005-06       Impact factor: 4.078

4.  The personal significance of home: habitus and the experience of receiving long-term home care.

Authors:  Jan Angus; Pia Kontos; Isabel Dyck; Patricia McKeever; Blake Poland
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2005-03

5.  The ethics of home care: autonomy and accommodation.

Authors:  B Collopy; N Dubler; C Zuckerman
Journal:  Hastings Cent Rep       Date:  1990 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 2.683

Review 6.  Physician recommendations and patient autonomy: finding a balance between physician power and patient choice.

Authors:  T E Quill; H Brody
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  1996-11-01       Impact factor: 25.391

7.  Transforming homes and hospitals.

Authors:  W Ruddick
Journal:  Hastings Cent Rep       Date:  1994 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.683

8.  Bringing the hospital home. Ethical and social implications of high-tech home care.

Authors:  J D Arras; N N Dubler
Journal:  Hastings Cent Rep       Date:  1994 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.683

Review 9.  What does a home mean and when does it cease to be a home? Home as a setting for rehabilitation and care.

Authors:  M Tamm
Journal:  Disabil Rehabil       Date:  1999-02       Impact factor: 3.033

10.  Resisting the siren call of individualism in pediatric decision-making and the role of relational interests.

Authors:  Erica K Salter
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  2013-12-20
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  1 in total

1.  Introduction: clinical ethics beyond the urban hospital.

Authors:  Erica K Salter; Joseph T Norris
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  2015-06
  1 in total

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