Psychosocial knowledge and allopathic medicine: points of convergence and departure.

H Russell Searight
Author Information

Abstract

The past 15 years have witnessed a call for allopathic medicine to incorporate psychosocial perspectives into education and clinical practice. While a biopsychosocial perspective has influenced academic medicine in areas such as primary care and psychiatry, its direct impact on clinical medicine has been questionable. One barrier to the incorporation of psychosocial information into medicine which has only recently received attention has been different cultural assumptions which govern medicine versus the social-behavioral sciences. These assumptions are examined in the context of four issues: knowledge paradigms, models of education, acculturation of psychosocial knowledge into medicine, and patient autonomy. This cultural analysis provides a vantage point for understanding similarities as well as points of divergence between psychosocial and biomedical knowledge and practice.

Keywords

References

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MeSH Term

Biomedical Technology
Diagnosis
Education, Medical
Freedom
Goals
Humanities
Humans
Informed Consent
Interdisciplinary Communication
Interprofessional Relations
Medicine
Paternalism
Patient Care
Personal Autonomy
Physician-Patient Relations
Physicians
Psychology
Social Sciences
Socioeconomic Factors
Sociology, Medical
Stress, Psychological
Terminally Ill

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