sábado, 16 de marzo de 2013

Humanismo médico/Humanism in medicine

                                                   http://www.smo.edu.mx/jornada2013/


Paciente versus cliente, tecnología versus tacto: ¿A donde se ha ido el humanismo? 
Patient versus customer, technology versus touch: where has humanism gone?
Reed CE.
Ann Thorac Surg. 2008 May;85(5):1511-4. doi: 10.1016/j.athoracsur.2008.02.053.

We practice medicine today in an environment of amazing and ever changing technology, in a sea of pharmaceuticals, and in a system that is money and customer driven. Computerized databases and sophisticated images dominate our practices and allow us to make decisions from remote locations. It is difficult to fathom how we would function in a medical world devoid of the tools, "toys," and treatments of today. Yet, prior to the 20th century, the physician's most powerful and oldest "instrument" was the laying on of hands. Often little else could be done except this simple act of compassion. In fact, the laying on of the hand developed into a scientific skill and became an important diagnostic tool. Feeling the pulse, palpating the abdomen, and percussing the chest were skills honed over time. They not only helped in the formulation of a diagnosis, the patient and the doctor were connected by touch. How could humanism become separated from medicine? Webster's dictionary defines humanism as "a doctrine, attitude, or way of life centered on human interests and values" [1]. Is not medicine centered on the patient, a human being who is ill? Unfortunately, there are forces that conspire against humanism. Many of these forces are not physician driven, but we have succumbed to them, and by our acquiescence we shape the next generation of doctors.
Liderazgo en medicina 
Leadership in medicine
Ron Paterson
NZMJ 4 August 2006, Vol 119 No 1239 Page 1 of 6
URL: http://www.nzma.org.nz/journal/119-1239/2098/ © NZMA
Today I do not want to be a doctor (by Glenn Colquhoun)
Today I do not want to be a doctor.
No one is getting any better.
Those who were well are sick again
And those who were sick are sicker.
http://journal.nzma.org.nz/journal/119-1239/2098/content.pdf 

  
 No hay doctores, sino proveedores de servicios de salud
We no longer have doctors in America; we have healthcare providers. We aren't patients; we're consumers. The healthcare system has turned the art and science of healing into big business, and many doctors can no longer devote the greater part of their working hours directly to patient  care, faced as they are with reams of insurance- and legal-related paperwork, the constant threat of malpractice, and a burgeoning patient population. Despite this, some physicians still enter the profession with deeply held convictions, hopes, and idealism, and go on to excel not just as medical doctors, but as human beings. Some volunteer their time and expertise mentoring others or volunteering their services. Some found or fund organizations devoted to good works. Some spend their off hours lost in research or tinkering with tools and ideas for theories or devices whose only profits may be measured in lives saved. Many do this on a volunteer basis and some in addition to their very full-time jobs as medical doctors.
http://samples.jbpub.com/9780763757335/57335_CH01_001_034.pdf
  

Atentamente
Anestesiología y Medicina del Dolor
www.anestesia-dolor.org

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