The first edition helped bring the family approach to health care into the medical mainstream. This new edition, like the first, provides health care professionals with a practical guide to working with and treating both the individual patient and the family. Tackling challenging and emerging issues
Family-Oriented Primary Care
β Scribed by Susan H. McDaniel PhD, Jeri Hepworth PhD, Thomas L. Campbell MD, Alan Lorenz MD (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag New York
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 493
- Edition
- 2
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
I was a Medical Student in 1966 when the Millis Report on the training of the generalist physician was published,de?ning the concept of primary care. According to the Report, the primary provider has four major responsib- ities or roles. The ?rst role is that of initial contact care of the undiffer- tiated patient. The second is to provide comprehensive care based on the belief that the primary provider should be able to manage the overwhe- ing majority of problems with which patients present. Equally important is the third roleβcontinuity and coordination of care within the health care system. Finally,the primary provider is responsible for demonstrating le- ership in the community. This Reportβs description of a primary provider seems as relevant today as it was when it was written. In 1994,the Institute of Medicineβs assessment of primary care added the responsibility of family and community integration of care to the Millis Report description. Without question there are many challenges to a contemporary imp- mentation of this comprehensive description of primary care, beginning with the level of individual patients who so often suffer from complex pr- lems, such as mental disorders and obesity. Treating these conditions in a brief primary care visit is dif?cult. At the level of the larger system, re- bursement is often inadequate and can represent policies that are uns- portive of primary care, such as those that compromise payment for preventive services that help patients to quit smoking or lose weight.
β¦ Table of Contents
Basic Premises of Family-Oriented Primary Care....Pages 1-15
How Families Affect Illness: Research on the Family's Influence on Health....Pages 16-27
Family Systems Concepts: Tools for Assessing Families in Primary Care....Pages 28-42
A Family-Oriented Approach to Individual Patients....Pages 43-53
Involving the Family in Daily Practice....Pages 54-71
Building Partnerships: Promoting Working Alliances and Motivation for Change....Pages 72-89
Family Interviewing Skills in Primary Care: From Routine Contact to the Comprehensive Family Conference....Pages 90-104
When Interactions Are Difficult....Pages 105-123
Working with Couples in Primary Care: One Plus One Is More Than Two....Pages 124-141
The Birth of a Family: Family-Oriented Pregnancy Care....Pages 142-166
Supporting Parents: Family-Oriented Child Healthcare....Pages 167-181
When Parents Get Stuck: Helping with Child Behavior Problems....Pages 182-202
Family-Oriented Care of Adolescents....Pages 203-220
Recognizing the Signs of Strain: Counseling Couples in Primary Care....Pages 221-241
Anticipating Loss: Healthcare for Older Patients and Their Family Caregivers....Pages 242-260
Looking Death in the Eye: Facilitating End-of-Life Care and the Grieving Process....Pages 261-284
Genetic Screening, Testing, and Families....Pages 285-303
The Developmental Challenges of Chronic Illness: Helping Patients and Families Cope....Pages 304-325
Integrating the MindβBody Split: A Biopsychosocial Approach to Somatic Fixation....Pages 326-345
Mobilizing Resources: The Assessment and Treatment of Depression in Primary Care....Pages 346-360
When Drinking or Drugs Is Part of the Problem: A Family Approach to the Detection and Management of Substance Use and Abuse....Pages 361-375
Protecting the Family: Domestic Violence and the Primary Care Clinician....Pages 376-398
Family-Oriented Primary Care in the Real World: Practical Considerations for Comprehensive Care....Pages 399-413
Acute Hospital Care: Letting the Family In....Pages 414-431
Working Together: Collaboration and Referral to Family-Oriented Mental Health Professionals....Pages 432-449
Managing Personal and Professional Boundaries: How the Clinician's Experience Can Be a Resource in Patient Care....Pages 450-464
β¦ Subjects
Medicine/Public Health, general
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