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
- Part 2 The clinical skills for values-based practice
- 4 Recovery in schizophrenia: a values wake-up call
- 5 Teenage acne: widening our values horizons
- 6 A smoking enigma: getting (and not getting) the knowledge
- 7 Diabetic control and controllers: nothing without communication
- 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
5 - Teenage acne: widening our values horizons
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
- Part 2 The clinical skills for values-based practice
- 4 Recovery in schizophrenia: a values wake-up call
- 5 Teenage acne: widening our values horizons
- 6 A smoking enigma: getting (and not getting) the knowledge
- 7 Diabetic control and controllers: nothing without communication
- 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
The role of reasoning in values-based practice is illustrated by the use of case-based reasoning (casuistry) in the management of a case of teenage acne.
Other topics include:
Evidence-based medicine and management of teenage acne
Cosmetic and medical treatments
Values and communication skills
Principles reasoning
Other methods of ethical reasoning (utilitarianism and deontology).
Take-away message for practice
You can use case-based and other ways of reasoning about values to explore your own and other's values as they as they impact on practice.
Where awareness of values as the first skills element of the process of values-based practice provides a wake-up call to values, reasoning about values as the second element is about expanding our values horizons. Reasoning skills in values-based practice are not used to derive particular moral or other evaluative conclusions (to “prove” what is right or wrong). In values-based practice, reasoning skills are used rather to explore and come to understand better our own and other's values as these bear on and influence a given situation.
Expanding our values horizons with case-based reasoning (casuistry)
The importance of expanding our values horizons in this way is illustrated in this chapter by following a consultation between a GP, Dr. Charles Mangate, and his patient Jane Brewer, a 17-year-old aspiring model with mild acne.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Essential Values-Based PracticeClinical Stories Linking Science with People, pp. 53 - 64Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012