Patients as partners in managing chronic disease

Harriet R. Holman(Stanford University)
BMJ
February 26, 2000
Cited by 700Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

General practice p 550 Education and debate p 569 When acute disease was the primary cause of illness patients were generally inexperienced and passive recipients of medical care. Now that chronic disease has become the principal medical problem the patient must become a partner in the process, contributing at almost every decision or action level. This is not just because patients deserve to be partners in their own health care (which, of course, they do) but also because health care can be delivered more effectively and efficiently if patients are full partners in the process. Today in the United States chronic disease is the major cause of disability, is the main reason why people seek health care, and consumes 70% of healthcare spending. The differences between acute and chronic diseases are seen in the box on the BMJ 's website. With acute disease, the treatment aims at return to normal. With chronic disease, the patient's life is irreversibly changed. Neither the disease nor its consequences are static. They interact to create illness patterns requiring continuous and complex management. Furthermore, variations in patterns of illness and treatments …


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