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The Mental Mechanisms of Patient Adherence to Long-Term Therapies
Mind and Care

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 6 a 7 settimane

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni

How can we accept that we ought to stop smoking, follow a diet, exercise, or take medications? The goal of this book is to describe the mechanisms of patients' adherence to long-term therapies, whose improvement, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), would be more beneficial than any biomedical progress. For example, approximately half of the patients do not regularly follow medical prescriptions, resulting in deleterious effects on people's health and a strong impact on health expenditure. This book describes how our beliefs, desires, and emotions intervene in our choices concerning our health, by referring to concepts developed within the framework of the philosophy of mind. In particular, it tries to explain how we can choose between an immediate pleasure and a remote reward-preserving our health and our life. We postulate that such an "intertemporal" choice can be directed by a "principle of foresight" which leads us to give priority to the future. Just like patients' non-adherence to prescribed medications, doctors often don't always do what they should: They are non-adherent to good practice guidelines. We propose that what was recently de-scribed as "clinical inertia" could also represent a case of myopia: From time to time doctors fail to consider the long-term interests of their patient. Both patients' non-adherence and doctors' clinical inertia represent major barriers to the efficiency of care. However, it is also necessary to respect patients' autonomy. The analysis of relationship between mind and care which is provided in this book sheds new light on the nature of the therapeutic alliance between doctor and patient, solving the dilemma between the ethical principles of beneficence and autonomy.

Info autore

Gérard Reach est Professeur d Endocrinologie-Diabétologie-Maladies Métaboliques à l Université Paris 13.

Riassunto

How can we accept that we ought to stop smoking, follow a diet, exercise, or take medications? The goal of this book is to describe the mechanisms of patients’ adherence to long-term therapies, whose improvement, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), would be more beneficial than any biomedical progress. For example, approximately half of the patients do not regularly follow medical prescriptions, resulting in deleterious effects on people’s health and a strong impact on health expenditure. This book describes how our beliefs, desires, and emotions intervene in our choices concerning our health, by referring to concepts developed within the framework of the philosophy of mind. In particular, it tries to explain how we can choose between an immediate pleasure and a remote reward—preserving our health and our life. We postulate that such an “intertemporal” choice can be directed by a “principle of foresight” which leads us to give priority to the future. Just like patients’ non-adherence to prescribed medications, doctors often don’t always do what they should: They are non-adherent to good practice guidelines. We propose that what was recently de-scribed as “clinical inertia” could also represent a case of myopia: From time to time doctors fail to consider the long-term interests of their patient. Both patients’ non-adherence and doctors’ clinical inertia represent major barriers to the efficiency of care. However, it is also necessary to respect patients’ autonomy. The analysis of relationship between mind and care which is provided in this book sheds new light on the nature of the therapeutic alliance between doctor and patient, solving the dilemma between the ethical principles of beneficence and autonomy.

Dettagli sul prodotto

Autori Gérard Reach, Gerard Reach
Editore Springer, Berlin
 
Contenuto Libro
Forma del prodotto Copertina rigida
Data pubblicazione 01.01.2015
Categoria Scienze umane, arte, musica > Filosofia > Altro
Saggistica > Filosofia, religione > Altro
Scienze naturali, medicina, informatica, tecnica > Biologia
 
EAN 9783319122649
ISBN 978-3-31-912264-9
Numero di pagine 207
Illustrazioni XXI, 207 p. 23 illus.
Dimensioni (della confezione) 16.5 x 23.9 x 1.7 cm
Peso (della confezione) 485 g
 
Serie Philosophy and Medicine > 118
Philosophy and Medicine
Categorie Bioethik, B, Medicine: general issues, Bioethics, Medical Ethics, Health Sciences, Religion and Philosophy, Medicine—Philosophy, Philosophy of Medicine, Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
 

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