Interactions between persons—Knowledge, decision making, and the co-production of practice

Journal Article (2019)
Author(s)

Michael Loughlin (University of West London)

Stephen Buetow (The University of Auckland)

Michael Cournoyea (University of Toronto)

Samantha Copeland (TU Delft - Ethics & Philosophy of Technology)

Benjamin Chin-Yee (University of Toronto)

K. W.M. Fulford (University of Oxford)

Copyright
© 2019 Michael Loughlin, Stephen Buetow, Michael Cournoyea, S.M. Copeland, Benjamin Chin-Yee, K. W.M. Fulford
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1111/jep.13297
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Copyright
© 2019 Michael Loughlin, Stephen Buetow, Michael Cournoyea, S.M. Copeland, Benjamin Chin-Yee, K. W.M. Fulford
Issue number
6
Volume number
25
Pages (from-to)
911-920
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

There is now broad agreement that ideas like person-centred care, patient expertise and shared decision-making are no longer peripheral to health discourse, fine ideals or merely desirable additions to sound, scientific clinical practice. Rather, their incorporation into our thinking and planning of health and social care is essential if we are to respond adequately to the problems that confront us: they need to be seen not as “ethical add-ons” but core components of any genuinely integrated, realistic and conceptually sound account of healthcare practice. This, the tenth philosophy thematic edition of the journal, presents papers conducting urgent research into the social context of scientific knowledge and the significance of viewing clinical knowledge not as something that “sits within the minds” of researchers and practitioners, but as a relational concept, the product of social interactions. It includes papers on the nature of reasoning and evidence, the on-going problems of how to ‘integrate’ different forms of scientific knowledge with broader, humanistic understandings of reasoning and judgement, patient and community perspectives. Discussions of the epistemological contribution of patient perspectives to the nature of care, and the crucial and still under-developed role of phenomenology in medical epistemology, are followed by a broad range of papers focussing on shared decision-making, analysing its proper meaning, its role in policy, methods for realising it and its limitations in real-world contexts.

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