Publication | Closed Access
Love, Boundaries, and the Patient-Physician Relationship
72
Citations
24
References
1997
Year
NursingFamily MedicinePalliative CarePrimary CareMedical EthicsHumanity And MedicineInterpersonal CommunicationPatient ExperienceInterpersonal RelationshipsPatient EducationPatient-physician RelationshipSocial SciencesTherapeutic RelationshipPatient-centered OutcomeMedicineBoundary TransgressionsPsychologyPersonal Boundaries
Physicians often use their relationships with patients to promote specific therapeutic goals. Because of their personal histories, values, and biases, patients may react to physicians in ways that inhibit or enhance the relationship. The feelings that are aroused may induce physicians to become overly distant, engendering patient and physician dissatisfaction, or to become overly involved emotionally, which can have serious psychological and clinical consequences. We explore how a balance between clinical objectivity and bonding with the patient is optimal and achievable. The nature and origin of personal boundaries are described. Boundary transgressions on the part of the patient are discussed, and the means of preventing transgressions by both patients and physicians through medical education, the process of self-awareness, and an exploration of family-of-origin issues are proposed. Through attention to communication with patients, the physician can maintain an empathetic yet objective relationship with the patient.
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