The Doctor-Patient Relationship and Self-Stigma

Abstract

The text is an analysis of the relational complex in a therapeutic space. Analysis started from the need to perform a medical act depending also on understanding these aspects. In the therapeutic process, diagnosis and treatment in their classical sense are just two of the aspects of a relational type interpersonal reality, which is much more complex. In fact, doctor-patient relationship is part of a relational system including the patient, his family, the physician and society. The four factors interact with each other, and the final result, the result that has a therapeutic effect on the patient, is a synthesis of all these interactions. Stigma is a pathological psychological product affecting all relations. Stigma is usually part of the collective mind, but also part of individual psychology. When stigma affects a patient’s mind, its effect is profoundly anti-therapeutic. In psychiatry these relations are more important than in any other medical field. The brief analysis of these relations, in the therapeutic context of a patient, is the subject of the following text. Understanding all these aspects has a direct effect on the quality and performance of the medical act.

Share and Cite:

Cornuțiu, G. (2013). The Doctor-Patient Relationship and Self-Stigma. Psychology, 4, 506-509. doi: 10.4236/psych.2013.46071.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

[1] Aristotel (2005). Despre suflet (Romanian Re-edit, p. 203). Bucharest: Humanitas.
[2] Calvin, H. W. (2007). Cum gandeste creierul (p. 26). Bucharest: Humanitas.
[3] Confucius (1994). Doctrina lui Confucius sau cele patru carti sacre ale chinei (The Four Books, p. 146). Bucharest: Timpul.
[4] Cornutiu, G. (2004). Bazele psihologice ale practicii medicale (pp. 148-159. Oradea: Ed. Imprimeriei de Vest.
[5] Great, A. (2001). The book of destiny (Romanian Re-edit, p. 71). Bucuresti: Univers Enciclopedic.
[6] Holbeck, J. (2011). Doctor-patient relationship. URL (last checked 27 April 2013). http://healthculturesociety.wikispaces.com/Doctor–Patient+Relationships
[7] Iftimovici, R. (2009). Universal history of medicine and pharmacy (p. 33). Bucharest: Ed. Academiei.
[8] Interian, A., Ang, A., Gara, M. A., Rodriguez, M., & Vega, W. (2011). The long-term trajectory of depression among Latinos in primary care and its relationship to depression care disparities. General Hospital Phiatry, 33, 94-101. doi10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2010.12.001
[9] Mezzich, J. (2008). Psychiatry on: Articulating medicine’s science and humanism. World Psychiatry, 6, 65-67.
[10] O’Brien, M., & Houston, G. (2007). Integrative therapy: A practitioner’s guide (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications Ltd., 50.
[11] Osler, W. (1921). The evolution of modern medicine (p. 208). New Haven, CT: Yale University.
[12] Plato (1993). Phaidros (Plato-Phaidros—Romanian Re-edit, pp. 77, 86). Bucharest: Humanitas.
[13] Rabin, A.J., & Associates, Ltd. (2010). Doctors/patient relationship and the struggle with disability. URL (last checked 21 May 2013). http://www.rabinsslaw.com/Articles/Doctors-patient-Relationships-And-The-Struggle-With-Disability.shtml
[14] Radden, J. (2004). The philosophy of psychiatry. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 283-286.
[15] Sadler, Z.J. (2005). Values and psychiatric diagnosis. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 41, 211, 271.
[16] St. Augustin (1992). Solliloquies (Romanian Re-edit, p. 67). Timisoara: Editura de Vdoctorest.
[17] Tonang, D.A. (2006). Dealing with -patient-internet online relationship: Aoctor’s perspective. Hiroshima: Scientific Meeting.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.