Patient-Centered Medicine:: A Human Experience emphasizes the health professionals role in caring for patients as unique individuals by focusing on the patients psychological and social realities as well as their biological needs. The book concerns itself with caring for the whole patient, and outlines the basic principles involved in developing a biopsychosocial approach to medical practice. This is a volume of guidelines that will help medical students and cliniciansdevelop and master basic attitudes and skills essential to providing empathic and comprehensive medical care. As Norman Cousins writes in the foreword, The authors understand and repeatedly demonstrate in this book, that the patient-physician relationship is a powerful, sometimes mysterious, frequently healinginteraction between human beings. It is the person of the doctor and the presence of the doctor-just as much and frequently more than-what the doctor does that creates an environment for healing. The physician represents restoration. The physician holds the lifeline. Since the books original publication by University Park Press in 1984, greater awareness and acceptance of the biopsychosocial model has occurred, and medical schools are now working to fully integrate psychosocial education intothe clinical curriculum.
Foreword: Dr. Andrew Weil; Foreword: Physician as Humanist, Norman Cousins; Preface: David Rosen and Uyen Hoang; Prologue: An Early Career Female Physicians Perspective, Uyen Hoang; 1. Medicine as a Human Experience; 2. Clinical Application of the Biopsychosocial Model; George L. Engel; 3. The Care of the Patient: Art or Science; George L. Engel; 4. The Doctor-Patient Relationship; 5. The Patient-Centered Interview; 6. The Experience of Illness and Hospitalization; 7. The Nature of the Healing Process; Epilogue: Desiderata;
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