Giving Patients Responsibility or Fostering Mutual Response-Ability: Family Physicians’ Constructions of Effective Chronic Illness Management

Author:

Thille Patricia H.1,Russell Grant M.2

Affiliation:

1. University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada,

2. Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Abstract

Current visions of family medicine and models of chronic illness management integrate evidence-based medicine with collaborative, patient-centered care, despite critiques that these constructs conflict with each other. With this potential conflict in mind, we applied a critical discursive psychology methodology to present discursive patterns articulated by 13 family physicians in Ontario, Canada, regarding care of patients living with multiple chronic illnesses. Physicians constructed competing versions of the terms “effective chronic illness management” and “patient involvement.” One construction integrated individual responsibility for health with primacy of “evidence,” resulting in a conceptualization consistent with paternalistic care. The second constructed effective care as involving active partnership of physician and patient, implying a need to foster the ability of both practitioners and patients to respond to complex challenges as they arose. The former pattern is inconsistent with visions of family medicine and chronic illness management, whereas the latter embodies it.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference43 articles.

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2. Belle Brown, J., Weston, W.W. & Stewart, M. ( 1995). The first component: Exploring both the disease and the illness experience. In M. Stewart , J. Belle Brown, W. W. Weston, I. R. McWhinney, C. L. McWilliam, & T. R. Freeman (Eds.), Patient-centered medicine: Transforming the clinical method (pp. 31-41). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

3. Bridging the gap.

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