'It is not a pill'

Person-centered care seeks to improve health care by recognizing the individual patient’s unique experience and by acknowledging the patient as an active and responsible participant in their own care. It is also conceptualized as a reaction to evidence-based medicine, opposing its alleged reduction...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Doris Lydahl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies 2019-12-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies
Online Access:https://www.ntnu.no/ojs/index.php/njsts/article/view/3067
id doaj-abf7b9542c9f4aceb8913f63b5703bb2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-abf7b9542c9f4aceb8913f63b5703bb22020-11-24T21:52:58ZengNordic Journal of Science and Technology StudiesNordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies1894-46472019-12-017210.5324/njsts.v7i2.3067'It is not a pill'Doris Lydahl0University of Gothenburg Person-centered care seeks to improve health care by recognizing the individual patient’s unique experience and by acknowledging the patient as an active and responsible participant in their own care. It is also conceptualized as a reaction to evidence-based medicine, opposing its alleged reductionist and exclusionary tendencies. Therefore, person-centered care is often conceived as different from evidence-based medicine, taking into account the combined biological, psychological and social identity of the patient which evidence-based medicine reduces to a set of signs and symptoms. In this article, I analyze a paradoxical case in which a randomized controlled trial was used to evaluate person-centered care. Drawing on five interviews with researchers involved in this trial and on research documents and articles, I examine the entanglement of person-centered-care and evidence-based medicine from an STS perspective of standardization, uncertainties and promises. I first discuss the uncertainties and promises that emerge when trying to follow a research protocol. Second, the article illustrates the uncertainties and possibilities in knowing exactly what one measures. Finally, the article discuss the creation of a standard person. The article concludes that while the relation between person-centered care and evidence-based medicine is more complex than we might assume, the randomized controlled trial also transformed person-centered care in the process of evaluating it. https://www.ntnu.no/ojs/index.php/njsts/article/view/3067
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Doris Lydahl
spellingShingle Doris Lydahl
'It is not a pill'
Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies
author_facet Doris Lydahl
author_sort Doris Lydahl
title 'It is not a pill'
title_short 'It is not a pill'
title_full 'It is not a pill'
title_fullStr 'It is not a pill'
title_full_unstemmed 'It is not a pill'
title_sort 'it is not a pill'
publisher Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies
series Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies
issn 1894-4647
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Person-centered care seeks to improve health care by recognizing the individual patient’s unique experience and by acknowledging the patient as an active and responsible participant in their own care. It is also conceptualized as a reaction to evidence-based medicine, opposing its alleged reductionist and exclusionary tendencies. Therefore, person-centered care is often conceived as different from evidence-based medicine, taking into account the combined biological, psychological and social identity of the patient which evidence-based medicine reduces to a set of signs and symptoms. In this article, I analyze a paradoxical case in which a randomized controlled trial was used to evaluate person-centered care. Drawing on five interviews with researchers involved in this trial and on research documents and articles, I examine the entanglement of person-centered-care and evidence-based medicine from an STS perspective of standardization, uncertainties and promises. I first discuss the uncertainties and promises that emerge when trying to follow a research protocol. Second, the article illustrates the uncertainties and possibilities in knowing exactly what one measures. Finally, the article discuss the creation of a standard person. The article concludes that while the relation between person-centered care and evidence-based medicine is more complex than we might assume, the randomized controlled trial also transformed person-centered care in the process of evaluating it.
url https://www.ntnu.no/ojs/index.php/njsts/article/view/3067
work_keys_str_mv AT dorislydahl itisnotapill
_version_ 1725873751897145344