Humanistic medicine
Humanistic medicine is an interdisciplinary field in the medical practice of clinical care popular in the modern health systems of developed countries.
Problems facing healthcare
In many countries with modern healthcare systems, healthcare systems are facing enormous difficulties in meeting demands given limited healthcare budgets. Healthcare professionals often experience high levels of stress and burnout. Health professionals facing a large number of patients are not giving individual patients the care they want, resulting in a very high number of patients seeking alternative treatments and rejecting vaccinations for their children. The rising costs of medical services and medication are becoming unaffordable for many patients, preventing these individuals from receiving adequate healthcare without spending a large percentage of their disposable income. Studies have shown that poor doctor-patient relationships result in frequent lawsuits against healthcare providers.[1] These lawsuits have become a major burden to medical personnel and have risen in both number and cost in developed nations.
The philosophy of humanistic medicine
The crux of humanistic medicine is "holistic healing"—defined as treating not only the physical body of the patient but treating the metaphysical soul as well. Humanistic medicine professionals use techniques like energy medicine and contact healing. It is the humanistic belief that one’s suffering during illness stems from the feeling of isolation from other human beings while in a weakened state. By reestablishing this connection and aligning the patient's chakras, true healing can begin to take place. The scientific basis for integrative humanistic medicine has been investigated, but the degree to which "integrative humanistic medicine" is distinct from the biopsychosocial model is not clear.
Practice
Among the approaches used to encourage the practice of a more humane medicine are narrative medicine and patient empowerment. Narrative medicine is a way of educating physicians, nurses and other providers that uses storytelling (and active listening) to emphasize the humanity of patient and provider, enabling the "physician to practice medicine with empathy, reflection, professionalism, and trustworthiness." Patient empowerment seeks to create an equal partnership between doctors and their patients, placing values at the center of the healthcare encounter.[2][3] Both of the practices emphasize the importance of the human experience in the practice of medicine, and help to ensure that the humanity of the patient is not obscured in a morass of lab results, patient charts, and insurance regulations. Humanistic medicine strives to create ideal and balanced care that sacrifices neither cutting-edge science nor the gentle art of creating a caring relationship. Various health professional schools across the U.S. have begun to integrate humanistic medical teaching into their curricula in an effort to offset what some view as an over-emphasis on medical technology to the detriment of individual patient care.
Criticism
It is not widely accepted that "humanistic medicine" refers to a belief or set of practices that differ significantly from the biopsychosocial model of care. Further, many of the terms used by its advocates such as "soul" and "spiritual" are not well defined nor specifically explored experimentally inasmuch as these approaches contribute to patient welfare beyond those employed by the biopsychosocial model.
References
- Beckman, Howard (1994). "The Doctor-Patient Relationship and Malpractice Lessons From Plaintiff Depositions". JAMA Internal Medicine. 154 (12): 1365–1370. doi:10.1001/archinte.1994.00420120093010. PMID 8002688.
- Kelly, M; Heath, I; Howick, J; Greenhalgh, T (2015). "The importance of values in evidence-based medicine". BMC Medical Ethics. 16 (69). doi:10.1186/s12910-015-0063-3. PMC 4603687. PMID 26459219.
- Fulford, KWM; Peile, H; Carroll, H. Essential Values-Based Practice. ISBN 9780521530255.
- ^ Patz JA, Jodrey D. Occupational health in surgery: risks extend beyond the operating room. Aust & NZ Journal of Surgery 1995; 65: 627-629.
- ^ Bombardieri D, Easthope G. Convergence between orthodox and alternative medicine: a theoretical elaboration and empirical test. Health 2000; 4: 479-494.
- ^ Little M. Healthcare rationing: constraints and equity. Medical Journal of Australia 2001; 174: 641-642.
- ^ Remen, Rachel Naomi. Kitchen Table Wisdom. 2001. 55-58.
- ^ Charon R. Narrative medicine: A model for empathy, reflection, profession, and trust. The Journal of the American Medical Association 2001; 286: 1897.
- ^ Little, J Miles. Humanistic medicine or values-based medicine...what's in a name? Medical Journal of Australia 2002; 177: 319-321.