Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Review quotes
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- A bold claim to start this book
- Prologue: linking science with people
- Part 1 Values, individuals and an overview of values-based practice
- 1 “It's my back, Doctor!” (episode 1): values and clinical decision-making
- 2 “It's my back, Doctor!” (episode 2): applying the tools already in the clinical toolbox for working with values to individuals
- 3 An outline of values-based practice: its point, premise and ten-part process
- Part 2 The clinical skills for values-based practice
- Part 3 Relationships in values-based practice
- Part 4 Science and values-based practice
- Part 5 Bringing it all together
- Postcript: the small change of care
- A bold claim to end this book
- Appendix A Values-based practice summary and definitions of key terms
- Appendix B Values-based practice teaching framework
- Index
1 - “It's my back, Doctor!” (episode 1): values and clinical decision-making
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Review quotes
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- A bold claim to start this book
- Prologue: linking science with people
- Part 1 Values, individuals and an overview of values-based practice
- 1 “It's my back, Doctor!” (episode 1): values and clinical decision-making
- 2 “It's my back, Doctor!” (episode 2): applying the tools already in the clinical toolbox for working with values to individuals
- 3 An outline of values-based practice: its point, premise and ten-part process
- Part 2 The clinical skills for values-based practice
- Part 3 Relationships in values-based practice
- Part 4 Science and values-based practice
- Part 5 Bringing it all together
- Postcript: the small change of care
- A bold claim to end this book
- Appendix A Values-based practice summary and definitions of key terms
- Appendix B Values-based practice teaching framework
- Index
Summary
Topics covered in this chapter
Three key points about values in medicine are outlined as illustrated by a GP consultation for chronic low back pain between Dr. Gulati and her patient, Roy Walker.
Other topics include:
Ethical and other values
Clinician and patient values
Foreground and background values
The network of values
Values, decisions and actions
NICE guidelines for low back pain.
Take-away message for practice
Values in medicine (i) include but are wider than ethics, (ii) are everywhere and (iii) are action-guiding.
Values-based practice, as we indicated in our introduction, is a new skills-based approach to working more effectively with complex and sometimes conflicting values in medicine. As such, values-based practice is like evidence-based practice: both are responses to the growing complexity of clinical decision-making. Evidence-based practice supports clinical decision-making where complex and sometimes conflicting evidence is in play. Values-based practice supports clinical decision-making where complex and sometimes conflicting values are in play.
In this chapter, we illustrate the complexities of values in medicine not with a high-profile “ethics case” but rather as they emerge from the everyday scenario of a GP consultation for chronic low back pain. Three key points will emerge from this scenario, namely that values in medicine:
are wider than just ethics, which nonetheless are an important aspect of our values;
are everywhere in medicine, although not always recognized for what they are;
are important because they stand alongside evidence in guiding decisions and actions.
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- Chapter
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- Essential Values-Based PracticeClinical Stories Linking Science with People, pp. 3 - 10Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012
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