Patients' rights in decision making: The case for personalism versus paternalism in health care
- 15 August 1980
- Vol. 46 (S4) , 1035-1041
- https://doi.org/10.1002/1097-0142(19800815)46:4+<1035::aid-cncr2820461329>3.0.co;2-h
Abstract
The purpose of this presentation is to shine a psychological spotlight on the role of the breast cancer patient in the process of her decision making about her medical care and the specific influence that the nature of the physician-patient interaction has on that behavior. The vision of the parental physician as unilateral authority in decisions about health care is dimming. The picture is being supplanted by a new image that promotes a view of personalism and a concept of "shared responsibility." The wave of consumerism is washing the shores of medical practice, and women are establishing their beachhead. Women are demonstrating their knowledge, their competence, and their responsibility in exercising decisions about their medical treatments and the quality of their survival. Therefore, it is essential to educate patients to exhibit informed consumer behavior and encourage physicians to recognize the value of a patient's participation. Such collaborative endeavors could result in increased patient satisfaction, reduced burdens for the physician, and preserved patients' feelings of individuality, autonomy, and sense of personal dignity.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Patient educationPostgraduate Medicine, 1979
- Patient Participation in the Patient-Provider Interaction: The Effects of Patient Question Asking on the Quality of Interaction, Satisfaction and ComplianceHealth Education Monographs, 1977