3 januari 2024: Bron: American Journal of Opthalmology Published:November 01, 2023

Uit literatuuronderzoek blijkt dat compassievolle gezondheidszorg (mededogen met de patiënten) de fysieke en psychologische uitkomsten voor patiënten meetbaar verbetert, de therapietrouw van patiënten vergroot, de kwaliteit en veiligheid van de gezondheidszorg verbetert, de financiële marges vergroot en burn-out bij artsen voorkomt. En volgens onderzoekers is compassie - mededogen voor patiënten aan te leren. 

Compassie / mededogen is een term die is bedacht door Stephen Trzeciak, een arts en co-auteur van een boek dat in 2019 werd gepubliceerd met de titel Compassionomics: The Revolutionary Scientific Evidence That Caring Makes a Difference  

Het artikel is heel summier in een abstract weergegeven maar raadpleeg ook de referentielijst voor gerelateerde artikelen:

Compassionomics: The Science and Practice of Caring

Published:November 01, 2023DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajo.2023.10.006

Purpose

To summarize the scientific evidence that compassion can measurably improve patient outcomes, health care quality and safety, and the well-being of health care providers, and to consider specific strategies for cultivating compassion and better communicating it to patients.

Design

Perspective.

Methods

We selectively reviewed the literature on compassion in health care, including obstacles to its expression and the demonstrated effects of provider compassion on patient outcomes, health care quality and cost, and provider well-being. We also review evidence regarding the trainability of compassion, discuss proven methods for cultivating individual compassion, and recommend strategies for incorporating it into routine medical practice.

Results

Compassion is the emotional response to another's pain or suffering, accompanied by a desire to alleviate it. Review of the literature shows that compassionate health care measurably improves physical and psychological patient outcomes, increases patient adherence, improves health care quality and safety, increases financial margins, and prevents physician burnout. Psychophysiological research shows that empathy and compassion can be actively cultivated through intentional practice. Validated models of compassion-based interactions can facilitate the consistent expression of compassion in daily medical practice.

Conclusions

Given its many proven benefits to patients, health care organizations, and providers, compassion should be cultivated by health care providers and systems and considered an essential component of optimal medical care.

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To summarize the scientific evidence that compassion can measurably improve patient outcomes, health care quality and safety, and the well-being of health care providers, and to consider specific strategies for cultivating compassion and better communicating it to patients.

Design

Perspective.

Methods

We selectively reviewed the literature on compassion in health care, including obstacles to its expression and the demonstrated effects of provider compassion on patient outcomes, health care quality and cost, and provider well-being. We also review evidence regarding the trainability of compassion, discuss proven methods for cultivating individual compassion, and recommend strategies for incorporating it into routine medical practice.

Results

Compassion is the emotional response to another's pain or suffering, accompanied by a desire to alleviate it. Review of the literature shows that compassionate health care measurably improves physical and psychological patient outcomes, increases patient adherence, improves health care quality and safety, increases financial margins, and prevents physician burnout. Psychophysiological research shows that empathy and compassion can be actively cultivated through intentional practice. Validated models of compassion-based interactions can facilitate the consistent expression of compassion in daily medical practice.

Conclusions

Given its many proven benefits to patients, health care organizations, and providers, compassion should be cultivated by health care providers and systems and considered an essential component of optimal medical care.




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