The patient-centred interview: the key to biopsychosocial diagnosis and treatment

  • Pekka Larivaara, Jorma Kiuttu, Anja
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Abstract

The article reports on some ideas and experiences gained from a holistic approach to working with patients and introduces a viewpoint that includes opinions on how postmodernism, the biopsychosocial model and a patient-centred interviewing style can change traditional, biomedical-oriented medicine. During the past 10 years, we have been instructing medical students in the use of this patient-centred interviewing model and have trained experienced general practitioners (GPs) in adopting it in 2-year family-oriented continuing medical education courses. We believe that doctors and other health care providers, particularly in primary care settings, need a comprehensive concept of human health and illness, and that skill in patient-centred interviewing is the product of a deep learning process. In conclusion, we have learned that a successful patient-centred interview helps the GP to better understand the patient and helps to explain the data that the patient presents. Patient-centred orientation and interviewing also change the communication between doctor and patient in a direction which supports the patient's and his/her family members' own resources in the healing process.

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Pekka Larivaara, Jorma Kiuttu, Anja. (2001). The patient-centred interview: the key to biopsychosocial diagnosis and treatment. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, 19(1), 8–13. https://doi.org/10.1080/02813430119395

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