» Articles » PMID: 14499519

Patient Empowerment and Control: a Psychological Discourse in the Service of Medicine

Overview
Journal Soc Sci Med
Date 2003 Sep 23
PMID 14499519
Citations 31
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The discourse of the patient as an active agent in managing illness and health care has become very important in medicine. It is seen in the significance attached to patient empowerment and participation, and in the burgeoning research into patients' coping with illness. The discourse cannot be fully understood from within conventional scientific frameworks because it is part of those frameworks. Instead, its current prominence can be understood by examining how it meets the needs of those who use it. Specifically, it has combined with earlier discourses of disease in a way that allows clinicians to withdraw from responsibility for areas of patient need that are problematic for medicine, such as unexplained symptoms, chronic disease and pain. This view is supported by evidence about how the discourse of patient as agent has been used in clinical consultation to constrain doctors' responsibility for patients' suffering. This discourse and other ways in which doctors and patients influence the boundaries of medical responsibility should be subjects for, rather than constraints on, empirical research.

Citing Articles

Mapping the Social Organisation of Neglect in the Case of Fibromyalgia: Using Smith's Sociology for People to Inform a Systems-Focused Literature Review.

Cupit C, Finlay T, Pope C Sociol Health Illn. 2025; 47(2):e70008.

PMID: 39888645 PMC: 11784928. DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.70008.


At the Heart of Resilience: Empowering Women's Agency in Navigating Cardiovascular Disease.

Code J CJC Open. 2024; 6(2Part B):473-484.

PMID: 38487058 PMC: 10935683. DOI: 10.1016/j.cjco.2023.12.013.


Design Development of the SMARTCLIC/CLICWISE Injection Device for Self-Administered Subcutaneous Therapies: Findings from Usability and Human Factor Studies.

Berman K, Moss S, Holden-Theunissen B, Satou N, Okada K, Latymer M Adv Ther. 2023; 40(7):3070-3086.

PMID: 37199860 PMC: 10272234. DOI: 10.1007/s12325-023-02512-2.


How End-of-Life Blogs Re-Affirm the "Power to be Oneself".

Green G Front Sociol. 2022; 6:775279.

PMID: 35097060 PMC: 8795734. DOI: 10.3389/fsoc.2021.775279.


Individualizing the burnout problem: Health professionals' discourses of burnout and recovery in the context of rehabilitation.

Korhonen M, Komulainen K Health (London). 2021; 27(5):789-809.

PMID: 34856833 PMC: 10423436. DOI: 10.1177/13634593211063053.