PATIENT EMPOWERMENT IS ONE OF THE WAYS WE CAN HELP PATIENTS HELP THEMSELVES.
BUT THERE ARE RISKS IN DOING SO. READ BELOW:
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On the subject of patient self-management the authors of this article published in Bioethics Volume 21 Issue 5 Page 243-250, June 2007 point out that,
“Four central ethical issues can be identified:
1) insufficient patient/family access to preparation that will optimize their competence to SM without harm to themselves,
2) lack of acknowledgement that an ethos of patient empowerment can mask transfer of responsibility beyond patient/family competency to handle that responsibility,
3) prevailing assumptions that preparation for SM cannot result in harm and that its main purpose is to deliver physician instructions, and
4) lack of standards for patient selection, which has the potential to exclude individuals who could benefit from learning to SM. Technology assessment offers one framework through which to examine available data about efficacy of patient SM and to answer the central question of what conditions must be put in place to optimize the benefits of SM while assuring that potential harms are controlled.
Reference: BARBARA K. REDMAN from the Wayne State University, and University of Pennsylvania Center for Bioethics
Barbara K. Redman, PhD, RN, FAAN, Dean and Professor, College of Nursing, Wayne State University, Cohn Building, Suite 12, 5557 Cass Avenue, Detroit, MI 48202.
RESPONSIBILITY FOR CONTROL; ETHICS OF PATIENT PREPARATION FOR SELF-MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC DISEASE, Wayne State University, and University of Pennsylvania Center for Bioethics
Web reference of the summary: http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-8519.2007.00550.x
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