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eMJA: Humanistic medicine or values-based medicine . . . what's in a name?
Humanistic medicine or values-based medicine . . . what's in a name? J Miles Little MJA 2002 177 (6): 319-321. "Humanistic medicine" is a term compounded, for therapeutic purposes, with the good intent of reminding clinicians of their need to be compassionate and empathic. Although the expression is arresting, and demands thought, it does not go far enough. "Values-based medicine" is a stronger term, reminding clinicians of the sustaining values that underpin the whole health endeavour. These values include an acceptance of the value of individual human life in quantity and quality, and of the importance to both individuals and communities of human security and flourishing. Values-based medicine can incorporate all the other paradigms of medicine, including scientific and evidence-based medicine, within it, because it can include anything that contributes to human security and flourishing. If we are to seek a new paradigm for a reconstructed view of healthcare, the term "values-based medicine" might have more power and relevance than "humanistic medicine". * Humanistic medicine was the theme of a seminar convened by the Center for Ideas and Society at the University of California – Riverside in 2001, where I presented a version of this article. It is not meant to be comprehensive, but a starting point for discussion, argument and disagreement about important values that sustain medicine.

Full Article: http://www.mja.com.au/public/issues/177_06_160902/lit10253_fm.html


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