Cordey Michaël, Chatelard Sophia, Widmer Daniel, Ouvrard Patrick, Herzig Lilli
Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Department of Family Medicine, General Medicine and Public Health Centre, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Philos Ethics Humanit Med. 2024 Jul 16;19(1):10. doi: 10.1186/s13010-024-00160-0.
This paper draws on qualitative research using focus groups involving 38 general practitioners (GPs). It explores their attitudes and feelings about (over-)medicalisation. Our main findings were that GPs had a complex representation of (over-)medicalisation, composed of many professional, social, technological, economic and relational issues. This representation led GPs to feel uncomfortable. They felt pressure from all sides, which led them to question their social roles and responsibilities. We identified four main GP-driven proposals to deal with (over-)medicalisation: (1) focusing on the communication in doctor-patient relationships; (2) grounding practices in evidence-based medicine; (3) relying on clinical skills, experience and intuition; and (4) promoting training, leadership bodies and social movements. Drawing on these proposals, we identify and discuss five paradigms that underpin GPs' attitudes toward (over-)medicalisation: underlying social factors, preventing medicalisation, managing uncertainties, sharing medical decision-making and thinking about care as a rationale. We suggest that these paradigms constitute a defensive posture against GPs' uncomfortable feelings. All five defensive paradigms were identified in our focus groups, echoing contemporary political debates on public health. This non-exhaustive framework forms the outline of what we call ordinary defensive medicine. GPs' uncomfortable feelings are the origin of their defensive solutions and the manifestation of their vulnerability. This professional vulnerability can be shared with the patient's vulnerability. In our view, this creates an opportunity to rediscover patient-doctor relationships and examine patients' and doctors' vulnerabilities together."There are many cases in which-though the signs of a confusion of tongues between the patient and his doctor are painfully present-there is apparently no open controversy. Some of these cases demonstrate the working of two other, often interlinked, factors. One is the patient's increasing anxiety and despair, resulting in more and more fervently clamouring demands for help. Often the doctor's response is guilt feelings and despair that his most conscientious, most carefully devised examinations do not seem to throw real light on the patient's "illness", that his most erudite, most modern, most circumspect therapy does not bring real relief." (Balint M. The Doctor, His Patient and the Illness. New York: International Universities; 2005. [1957].)"Theories about care put an unprecedented emphasis on vulnerability-taking up that challenge to transform what really counts in today's hospitals implies letting colleagues inside previously closely guarded professional boundaries" (2, our translation).
本文借鉴了定性研究,该研究采用了焦点小组的形式,涉及38名全科医生(GP)。它探讨了他们对(过度)医疗化的态度和感受。我们的主要发现是,全科医生对(过度)医疗化有复杂的认知,这种认知由许多专业、社会、技术、经济和人际关系问题组成。这种认知让全科医生感到不安。他们感到来自各方的压力,这使他们质疑自己的社会角色和责任。我们确定了全科医生提出的应对(过度)医疗化的四项主要建议:(1)注重医患关系中的沟通;(2)将实践建立在循证医学的基础上;(3)依靠临床技能、经验和直觉;(4)促进培训、领导机构和社会运动。基于这些建议,我们确定并讨论了支撑全科医生对(过度)医疗化态度的五种范式:潜在社会因素、防止医疗化、管理不确定性、共享医疗决策以及将关怀视为一种基本原理进行思考。我们认为,这些范式构成了全科医生应对不安情绪的防御姿态。我们在焦点小组中识别出了所有这五种防御范式,这与当前关于公共卫生的政治辩论相呼应。这个并非详尽无遗的框架构成了我们所谓的普通防御医学的轮廓。全科医生的不安情绪是他们防御性解决方案的根源,也是他们脆弱性的表现。这种职业上的脆弱性可能与患者的脆弱性并存。在我们看来,这创造了一个重新发现医患关系并共同审视患者和医生脆弱性的机会。“在许多情况下——尽管患者与医生之间语言混乱的迹象令人痛苦地存在——但显然没有公开的争议。其中一些案例展示了另外两个常常相互关联的因素的作用。一个是患者日益增加的焦虑和绝望,导致他们越来越急切地大声呼救。通常医生的反应是内疚感和绝望,因为他最尽责、最精心设计的检查似乎并没有真正揭示患者的‘疾病’,他最博学、最现代、最审慎的治疗并没有带来真正的缓解。”(巴林特·M.《医生、患者与疾病》。纽约:国际大学出版社;2005年。[1957年])“关于关怀的理论前所未有地强调脆弱性——接受这一挑战以改变当今医院真正重要的东西意味着让同事进入以前严密守护的专业界限之内”(2,我们的翻译)