This
article focuses on patients' participation in decision-making in meetings with
healthcare professionals in a healthcare system, based on neoliberal
regulations and ideas. Drawing on two constructed empirical cases, primarily
from the perspective of patients, this article analyses and discusses the
clinical practice around decision-making meetings within a Foucauldian
perspective. Patients' participation in decision-making can be seen as an
offshoot of respect for patient autonomy. A treatment must be chosen, when
patients consult physicians. From the perspective of patients, there is a
tendency for healthcare professionals to supply the patients with the
information that they think are necessary for them to make their own decision.
But patients do not always want to be a 'customer' in the healthcare system;
they want to be a patient, consulting an expert for help and advice, which
creates resistance to some parts of the decision-making process. Both
professionals and patients are subject to the structural frame of the medical
field, formed of both neoliberal framework and medical logic. The
decision-making competence in relation to the choice of treatment is placed
away from the professionals and seen as belonging to the patient.
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/medicine-and-health-care/american-research-journal-of-nursing/
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/medicine-and-health-care/american-research-journal-of-nursing/
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