2016
DOI: 10.1038/npjparkd.2016.19
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Beyond patient-centered care: person-centered care for Parkinson’s disease

Abstract: Interest has grown in centering Parkinson’s disease (PD) care provision on the welfare of the patient with PD. By putting the welfare of patients first, this patient-centric focus tends to subordinate the welfare of others including clinicians and carers. A possible solution is person-centered care. Rather than remove the spotlight from the patients, it widens that light to illuminate moral interests of all healthcare participants as persons whose welfare is interdependent. It assumes that unwellness among cli… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Thus, involving both patients and spouses is an important feature of the intervention. According to Buetow et al (2016), the matter of involvement is closely linked to personcentred care, based on the professional and personal involvement of all parties in each specific case (Buetow et al, 2016). Their, as well as our findings in this study, reflect involvement at different levels, especially related to knowing the personal stories of those involved.…”
Section: Involvement Of the Individual And The Couple As A Key Featuresupporting
confidence: 68%
“…Thus, involving both patients and spouses is an important feature of the intervention. According to Buetow et al (2016), the matter of involvement is closely linked to personcentred care, based on the professional and personal involvement of all parties in each specific case (Buetow et al, 2016). Their, as well as our findings in this study, reflect involvement at different levels, especially related to knowing the personal stories of those involved.…”
Section: Involvement Of the Individual And The Couple As A Key Featuresupporting
confidence: 68%
“…Considering that PD is fundamentally a disorder of frontal lobe function, 17 it may be that PwP are less aware than observers of their change in motor and no-motor function. While there may be concerns that OM in PD may impinge on person centred care, 18 this study suggests to the contrary, that OM provides both the PwP and the clinician with better information to inform decision making. In other diseases, it is well accepted that we should collect objective data around factors that can lead to better outcomes (such as targets for blood sugar) so as inform the individual patient about the benefits and consequences of the various options for treating their blood sugar.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 56%
“…This would result in holistic collaborative management of the patients moving towards ‘person-centred care’. 40 This may be an interesting aspect to explore in future research.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%