Epistemic justice is the basis of shared decision making

被引:8
|
作者
Galasinski, Dariusz [1 ]
Ziolkowska, Justyna [2 ]
Elwyn, Glyn [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wroclaw, Ctr Interdisciplinary Res Hlth & Illness, Sw Jadwigi 3-4, PL-50266 Wroclaw, Poland
[2] Univ Social Sci & Humanities, Ul Ostrowskiego 30b, PL-53238 Wroclaw, Poland
[3] Dartmouth Inst Hlth Policy & Clin Practice, Hanover, NH 03755 USA
关键词
Shared decision -making; Epistemic justice; SDM definition; Communication; ELDERLY-PATIENTS; HEALTH-CARE; PATIENT; INJUSTICE; PARTICIPATION; FACILITATORS; FRAMEWORK; BARRIERS; MODEL;
D O I
10.1016/j.pec.2023.107681
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background: There is little evidence that share decision-making (SDM) is being successfully implemented, with a significant gap between theory and clinical practice. In this article we look at SDM explicitly acknowledging its social and cultural situatedness and examine it as a set of practices (e.g. actions, such as communicating, referring, or prescribing, and decisions relating to them). We study clinicians' communicative performance as anchored in the context of professional and institutional practice and within the expected behavioural norms of actors situated in clinical encounters. Discussion: We propose to see conditions for shared decision-making in terms of epistemic justice, an explicit acknowledgment and acceptance of the legitimacy of healthcare users and their accounts and knowledges. We propose that shared decision-making is primarily a communicative encounter which requires both participants to have equal communicative rights. It is a process that is started by the clinician's decision and requires the suspension of their inherent interactional advantage.Conclusion: The epistemic-justice perspective we adopt leads to at least three implications for clinical practices. First, clinical training must go beyond the development of communication skills and focus more on an understanding of healthcare as a set of social practices. Second, we suggest medicine develop a stronger relationship with humanities and the social sciences. Third, we advocate that shared decision-making has issues of justice, equity, and agency at its core.
引用
收藏
页数:5
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