1st Edition

Patient-Centered Prescribing Seeking Concordance in Practice

     Series Editors: Moira Stewart, Judith Belle Brown and Thomas R Freeman Half of all prescribed medicines are used in a sub-optimal manner and clinicians struggle to find ways of improving the situation. There is a move towards greater partnership with patients, but concordance (shared decision making between patients and healthcare professionals) is a growing challenge for the profession. This practical book offers numerous real life case studies to demonstrate the way the patient-centered model, combined with other behavioural models, can result in a logical approach to prescribing for difficult clients, including 'non-compliant' and other challenging patients. Patient-Centered Prescribing fully considers the very complex nature of the issues at hand, ethical questions, time restrictions and financial matters, to produce a realistic analysis of the difficulties to be overcome in achieving better practice. This book is ideal for doctors, nurses and pharmacists, and postgraduate students of medicine, pharmacy and nursing. It is also of great interest to medical educators, particularly those teaching primary care and communication skills, and to everyone involved in developing doctor-patient partnerships.

    Understanding the issues. Taking medicines. The burden of the problem. The medical perspective. Understanding medicine taking in context. Understanding medicine taking: models and explanations. The patient-centered prescribing process. Decision-making and the patient's voice: the therapeutic decision model. Finding common ground. Finding common ground in 'special' situations. The therapeutic alliance model. Vignettes of negotiation. Unresolved issues in patient-centered prescribing. Individual. Professional. Societal.

    Biography

    Jon Dowell, Brian Williams, David Snadden