"我把他们当作一个完整的人去了解":家庭医生与遭遇社会不平等的病人的亲近故事

Monica Molinaro, Katrina Shen, Gina Agarwal, Gabrielle Inglis, Meredith Vanstone
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引用次数: 0

摘要

加拿大人的健康状况与社会不平等密不可分。虽然家庭医生通过对病人及其背景的纵向了解,能够恰到好处地提供解决社会因素的医疗服务,但由于初级医疗中的财政和资源需求,家庭医生面临着越来越大的压力,需要用更少的时间和资源为病人做更多的事情。护理学者露丝-马龙(Ruth Malone)认为,保持与患者的近距离接触,是对这些要求的一种抵抗。我们采用批判性叙事方法,对加拿大安大略省的 20 名家庭医生进行了 36 次访谈,这些家庭医生的工作对象都是有健康需求、与社会不公平现象有关的人,他们的故事表达并扩展了马龙的 "近距离 "概念。通过对家庭医生在以下方面的作用的描述,引用了接近性的概念:i) 根据病人对更多时间、空间和护理的需求,产生物理接近性;ii) 通过讲故事,在同事之间和病人社区之间发展叙事接近性;iii) 参与道德接近性,或认识到病人的脆弱性,在病人需求的激励下,"超越 "他们的护理和宣传角色。这些研究结果增加了 "接近 "的理论深度,将这一概念延伸到了新的临床环境中。这些故事也是对目前倡导合作式初级保健方法的医疗服务和医疗政策研究的补充,因为这些方法的要素有利于与最需要护理的患者建立亲近感。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“I get to know them as a whole person”: family physician stories of proximity to patients experiencing social inequity
Canadians’ health outcomes are inextricably tied to social inequities. While family medicine is aptly situated to provide care that addresses social factors through longitudinal knowledge of patients and their contexts, family physicians have come under increased pressure to do more for their patients with less time and resources due to financial and resource demands within primary care. Nursing scholar Ruth Malone has argued that remaining proximal, or close to patients, is a form of resistance to these demands. Using a critical narrative methodology, we conducted 36 interviews with 20 family physicians working with persons experiencing health needs related to social inequity in Ontario, Canada, whose stories expressed and expanded upon Malone’s proximity. Notions of proximity were invoked through descriptions of the role of family physicians in: i) generating physical proximity based on the patients’ needs for more time, space, and care; ii) developing narrative proximity through storytelling over time, both between colleagues and patient communities; and iii) engaging in moral proximity, or recognizing the vulnerabilities of their patients, by going “above and beyond” in their care and advocacy roles inspired by the needs of their patients. The findings add theoretical depth to proximity, extending this conceptualization into a new clinical context. These stories also complement current health services and health policy research that advocates for collaborative primary care approaches, as elements of these approaches are conducive to establishing proximity with patients who need care the most.
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