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PREFERENCE OF PATIENTS DATO’ AHMAD TAJUDDIN JAAFAR DEAN MEDICAL & ALLIED HEALTH SCIENCE ALLIANZE COLLEGE OF MEDICAL SCIENCES
PREFERENCE OF PATIENTS Patient preference  means the choices that persons make when they are faced with decisions about health and medical treatment.
Choices made by patients based on:- - Information provided by a physician - patients’ own experience, beliefs and    values.
When there are medical indication for treatment, a physician should propose a  treatment plan  that a patient may accept of refuse.
An informed, competent patients preference to accept or refuse medically indicated treatment has  clinical, ethical, legal and psychological importance
Patient preferences are the ethical and legal nucleus of a  patient-physician  relationship.
CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF PATIENT PREFERENCE Patient preference are essential to good clinical care because patients’ cooperation and satisfaction reflect the degree to which  medical intervention  fulfills the patients’ choices, values and needs.
Patients who collaborates with their physicians to reach a  shared health care decision  have greater trust in the doctor-patient relationship..(cont.)
.. (Cont.) cooperate more fully to implement the shared decision, and express greater satisfaction with their health care.
Research has shown that patients with chronic diseases enjoy better  health outcomes  when they ask questions, express opinions, and make their preferences known..(cont.)
..  (cont.) when their physicians have a ‘participatory’ rather than a ‘controlling’ decision making style.
A participatory style is associated with primary care training, skill in interviewing that facilitates emphatic listening and communication, and the opportunity to take time with patients.
This approach is referred to as  ‘patient-centered medicine’.
Documentation of the patients’ informed consent also serves as a defense for the physician against a claim that their patient was coerced.
Apart from clinical skill and carefulness, a respect for patient preferences, good communication and a participatory style of dealing with patients appear to be the most effective protection that physicians have against malpractice lawsuits.
PSYCHOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF PATIENT PREFERENCE : CONTROL Patient preference are psychologically significant because the ability to express preferences and have others respect them is crucial to a sense of personal worth.
When patient preference are ignored or devalued, patients are likely to distrust and perhaps disregard physician's recommendation
When patients are overtly or covertly uncooperative, the effectiveness of the therapy is threatened. Patient preference are important because their expression may lead to informed consent
ETHICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF PATIENT PREFERENCE AUTONOMY Patient preference are ethically significant because they manifest the value of personal autonomy
The recognition of patient preference respects the value of personal autonomy in medical care.
LEGAL SIGNIFICANCE OF PATIENT PREFERENCE Patient preference are legally significant because the law recognizes that all persons have a a fundamental right to control their own body, and the right to be protected from unwanted intrusions or ‘ unconsented touchings’
The legal requirement of explicit consent before specific treatment protects the legal right of patients to control what is done to their own bodies.
To the discovery of other factors, such as fears, fantasies, or unusual beliefs, that the physician should consider in dealing with the patients.

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Preference Of Patients

  • 1. PREFERENCE OF PATIENTS DATO’ AHMAD TAJUDDIN JAAFAR DEAN MEDICAL & ALLIED HEALTH SCIENCE ALLIANZE COLLEGE OF MEDICAL SCIENCES
  • 2. PREFERENCE OF PATIENTS Patient preference means the choices that persons make when they are faced with decisions about health and medical treatment.
  • 3. Choices made by patients based on:- - Information provided by a physician - patients’ own experience, beliefs and values.
  • 4. When there are medical indication for treatment, a physician should propose a treatment plan that a patient may accept of refuse.
  • 5. An informed, competent patients preference to accept or refuse medically indicated treatment has clinical, ethical, legal and psychological importance
  • 6. Patient preferences are the ethical and legal nucleus of a patient-physician relationship.
  • 7. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF PATIENT PREFERENCE Patient preference are essential to good clinical care because patients’ cooperation and satisfaction reflect the degree to which medical intervention fulfills the patients’ choices, values and needs.
  • 8. Patients who collaborates with their physicians to reach a shared health care decision have greater trust in the doctor-patient relationship..(cont.)
  • 9. .. (Cont.) cooperate more fully to implement the shared decision, and express greater satisfaction with their health care.
  • 10. Research has shown that patients with chronic diseases enjoy better health outcomes when they ask questions, express opinions, and make their preferences known..(cont.)
  • 11. .. (cont.) when their physicians have a ‘participatory’ rather than a ‘controlling’ decision making style.
  • 12. A participatory style is associated with primary care training, skill in interviewing that facilitates emphatic listening and communication, and the opportunity to take time with patients.
  • 13. This approach is referred to as ‘patient-centered medicine’.
  • 14. Documentation of the patients’ informed consent also serves as a defense for the physician against a claim that their patient was coerced.
  • 15. Apart from clinical skill and carefulness, a respect for patient preferences, good communication and a participatory style of dealing with patients appear to be the most effective protection that physicians have against malpractice lawsuits.
  • 16. PSYCHOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF PATIENT PREFERENCE : CONTROL Patient preference are psychologically significant because the ability to express preferences and have others respect them is crucial to a sense of personal worth.
  • 17. When patient preference are ignored or devalued, patients are likely to distrust and perhaps disregard physician's recommendation
  • 18. When patients are overtly or covertly uncooperative, the effectiveness of the therapy is threatened. Patient preference are important because their expression may lead to informed consent
  • 19. ETHICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF PATIENT PREFERENCE AUTONOMY Patient preference are ethically significant because they manifest the value of personal autonomy
  • 20. The recognition of patient preference respects the value of personal autonomy in medical care.
  • 21. LEGAL SIGNIFICANCE OF PATIENT PREFERENCE Patient preference are legally significant because the law recognizes that all persons have a a fundamental right to control their own body, and the right to be protected from unwanted intrusions or ‘ unconsented touchings’
  • 22. The legal requirement of explicit consent before specific treatment protects the legal right of patients to control what is done to their own bodies.
  • 23. To the discovery of other factors, such as fears, fantasies, or unusual beliefs, that the physician should consider in dealing with the patients.