Clinical autonomy, individual and collective: the problem of changing doctors' behaviour
Evidence-based medicine enables the profession to resist at least some of the challenges to its traditional autonomy: if informed doctors provide what is scientifically proven to be the best care there is less justification for external constraints. Yet, this defensive strategy depends on enforcing a new discipline within the profession such that individual practitioners accept mechanisms of external 'decision support' in their clinical practice. A study of the ways in which general practitioners in British Primary Care change their clinical behaviour shows that an emphasis on a 'patient centred' approach establishes an alternative individualised autonomy that seems inimical to the logic of evidence-based medicine. A tension therefore emerges between the maintenance of the autonomy of the profession as a collectivity through the promotion of a therapeutic rationality and the maintenance of the autonomy of the individual practitioner through the rhetoric of patient-centredness.
Year of publication: |
2002
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Authors: | Armstrong, David |
Published in: |
Social Science & Medicine. - Elsevier, ISSN 0277-9536. - Vol. 55.2002, 10, p. 1771-1777
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Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Primary care Doctor-patient interaction Evidence based Medicine Patient-centred medicine UK |
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