Literature DB >> 35321483

The Trilogy of Health Care: Caring and Healing of the Clinician.

Bro Ignatius Perkins1, Allen H Roberts2.   

Abstract

Today, more than we are aware of in the history of health services in the United States, is the critical need to reclaim and apply the core values and principles that inspired physicians and nurses to respond to their original call become consolers and healers of the sick and those in distress, and to refocus our attention on the person of the healer. In clinical practice today, we are endowed with enormously effective interventions that were unimaginable only a few decades earlier. In light of the fund of knowledge, clinical competencies, and technological advancements that we bring to bear in our experience in caring for our patients, the learning curve is never flat, never complete, and never static. Newer, safer, and more effective interventions in the cure of illnesses, management to relieve stress, moderate fear of surgery, and to promote healing that often lead to early discharge and return to normal activities of daily living are readily available in clinical practice. Yet, there are looming threats that compromise the person of clinician, for example, dehumanization, consumerism, commodification, and fungeability of the human person. This article will describe the Trilogy of Health Care: Caring and Healing of the Clinician and its application to the care and healing of physicians and nurses as they accompany one another in caring for a world in need of healing and hope. © Catholic Medical Association 2021.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Trilogy of Health Care (human dignity; catholic identity in health care; catholic spirituality; dehumanization; dignity of the human person; ethics; human flourishing; human freedom; natural law; personhood; spirituality for physicians; spirituality in caring

Year:  2021        PMID: 35321483      PMCID: PMC8935426          DOI: 10.1177/00243639211055556

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Linacre Q        ISSN: 0024-3639


  12 in total

1.  Dehumanization of contemporary medicine: causes and remedies.

Authors:  Marek Pawlikowski
Journal:  Neuro Endocrinol Lett       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 0.765

2.  Managed care at the bedside: how do we look in the moral mirror?

Authors:  Edmund D Pellegrino
Journal:  Kennedy Inst Ethics J       Date:  1997-12

3.  Patient-doctor relationships.

Authors:  Richard M Friedenberg
Journal:  Radiology       Date:  2003-02       Impact factor: 11.105

4.  A philosopher's reflection on commercialism in medicine.

Authors:  Jacob Needleman
Journal:  Camb Q Healthc Ethics       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 1.284

5.  Commercialism in the clinic: finding balance in medical professionalism.

Authors:  Joseph J Fins
Journal:  Camb Q Healthc Ethics       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 1.284

Review 6.  Terra es animata on having a life.

Authors:  G Meilaender
Journal:  Hastings Cent Rep       Date:  1993 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 2.683

Review 7.  Moral distress: the state of the science.

Authors:  Debra R Hanna
Journal:  Res Theory Nurs Pract       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 0.688

8.  Health Care Today: Whom Do We Really Care About?

Authors:  Brother Ignatius Perkins
Journal:  Linacre Q       Date:  2020-09-03

9.  Trends in Compensation for Primary Care and Specialist Physicians After Implementation of the Affordable Care Act.

Authors:  Walter R Hsiang; Cary P Gross; Sean Maroongroge; Howard P Forman
Journal:  JAMA Netw Open       Date:  2020-07-01

10.  Utilitarianism and the pandemic.

Authors:  Julian Savulescu; Ingmar Persson; Dominic Wilkinson
Journal:  Bioethics       Date:  2020-07       Impact factor: 1.898

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