Rationale: For patients, therapy has a stronger meaning than prescriptions. Context background: 50% of patients do not use their medications as recommended. This entails a significant increase in costs for health services, premature deaths, and hospitalizations. Research question: The research question explored “What factors contribute to the construction of therapeutic discordance between physician and patient in relation to the loss of meaning of a pharmacological treatment?”. Method: We adopted Charmaz's constructivist Grounded Theory, involving 42 participants (16 patients, 5 relatives, and 21 health care professionals). Results: The core category emerged is called "neglecting the relationship", and allows to understand and focus the main categories (non-negotiating contract; substituting the other; avoiding the conflict and being emotionally involved) in a conceptual framework. Conclusions: Therapeutic discordance theory is part of the concordance debate, highlighting the implicated factors that bring to light a negative result of the relational process between doctor and patient. Recommendations: The emerged knowledge of the factors involved in the therapeutic discordance can be useful to spread in training courses for physicians and medical students, a category that sees in training programs a strongly biomedical, centred imprint on illness, and often not centred on the person, family, and society.

Factors involved in therapeutic discordance in physician and patient relationship: a grounded theory study

2020

Abstract

Rationale: For patients, therapy has a stronger meaning than prescriptions. Context background: 50% of patients do not use their medications as recommended. This entails a significant increase in costs for health services, premature deaths, and hospitalizations. Research question: The research question explored “What factors contribute to the construction of therapeutic discordance between physician and patient in relation to the loss of meaning of a pharmacological treatment?”. Method: We adopted Charmaz's constructivist Grounded Theory, involving 42 participants (16 patients, 5 relatives, and 21 health care professionals). Results: The core category emerged is called "neglecting the relationship", and allows to understand and focus the main categories (non-negotiating contract; substituting the other; avoiding the conflict and being emotionally involved) in a conceptual framework. Conclusions: Therapeutic discordance theory is part of the concordance debate, highlighting the implicated factors that bring to light a negative result of the relational process between doctor and patient. Recommendations: The emerged knowledge of the factors involved in the therapeutic discordance can be useful to spread in training courses for physicians and medical students, a category that sees in training programs a strongly biomedical, centred imprint on illness, and often not centred on the person, family, and society.
mar-2020
Inglese
Therapeutic Discordance
Grounded Theory
Qualitative Health Research
Physician - patient relationship
Therapeutic Relationship
Sarli, Leopoldo
Artioli, Giovanna
Università degli Studi di Parma
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
RELAZIONE%20FINALE%20DOTTORATO%20-%20DIAZ%20CRESCITELLI%20MATIAS%20EDUARDO.pdf

accesso solo da BNCF e BNCR

Tipologia: Altro materiale allegato
Dimensione 539.17 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
539.17 kB Adobe PDF

I documenti in UNITESI sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14242/149721
Il codice NBN di questa tesi è URN:NBN:IT:UNIPR-149721