Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
I'm still going with self fulfilling prophesies here.
I come from a nursing background. And we've had extensive discussions about the paternalistic medical model vs the more 'autonomous patient' nursing model on this forum before. I find many patients ask that I take more of a paternal medical role in our interaction while others do not. "I don't know, you tell me" is a frequent response when I give a lot of information in the belief the patient can choose the best option when there are more than one.
As a health care consumer, and coming from a long history of having to assert a collegial role in the doctor/nurse relationship (in the old days
), I am sensitive to an overly paternalistic doctor. But they are rare. They most definitely are not common.
The experience I had with the doctor who didn't want to give me credit for knowing my own diagnosis was new. She was not used to her role and was threatened by my confidence. But I'm sure after a couple years, she would have had enough confidence to not be threatened by a patient's competence. I think that was more from her inexperience than her paternalism.
I come from a nursing background. And we've had extensive discussions about the paternalistic medical model vs the more 'autonomous patient' nursing model on this forum before. I find many patients ask that I take more of a paternal medical role in our interaction while others do not. "I don't know, you tell me" is a frequent response when I give a lot of information in the belief the patient can choose the best option when there are more than one.
As a health care consumer, and coming from a long history of having to assert a collegial role in the doctor/nurse relationship (in the old days
The experience I had with the doctor who didn't want to give me credit for knowing my own diagnosis was new. She was not used to her role and was threatened by my confidence. But I'm sure after a couple years, she would have had enough confidence to not be threatened by a patient's competence. I think that was more from her inexperience than her paternalism.