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Toma de decisiones compartidas en la atención de pacientes con diabetes: un desafío para Latinoamérica.

dc.contributoren-US
dc.contributores-ES
dc.creatorSerrano, Valentina
dc.creatorLarrea-Mantilla, Laura
dc.creatorRodriguez-Gutierrez, Rene
dc.creatorSpencer-Bonilla, Gabriela
dc.creatorMálaga, Germán
dc.creatorHardgraves, Ian
dc.creatorMontori, Victor M.
dc.date2017-01-12
dc.date.accessioned2019-11-11T18:27:22Z
dc.date.available2019-11-11T18:27:22Z
dc.identifierhttp://www.revistamedicadechile.cl/ojs/index.php/rmedica/article/view/4871
dc.identifier.urihttps://revistaschilenas.uchile.cl/handle/2250/111088
dc.descriptionPatients with Diabetes Mellitus often have several medical problems and carry a burden imposed by their illness and treatment. Health care often ignores the values, preferences and context of patients, leading to treatments that do not fit into patients’ overwhelmed lives. Shared Decision Making (SDM) emerges as a way to answer the question: "What's best for the patient?". SDM promotes an empathic conversation between patients and clinicians that integrates the best evidence available with their values, preferences and context. We discuss three SDM approaches for patients with diabetes: one focused on sharing information, another on making choices, and a third one on helping patients and clinicians to talk about how to address the problems of living with diabetes and its comorbidities. Despite the benefits demonstrated in studies conducted in the U.S. and Europe, the implementation of SDM continues to be a challenge. In Latin America, healthcare and socio-economic conditions render the implementation of SDM more challenging. Research aimed to respond to this challenge is necessary. Meanwhile, clinicians can practice SDM by sharing evidence-based information, giving voice to patients’ values and preferences in making choices, and creating empathic conversations aimed at decisions aligned with patients’ context, dreams, goals, and life expectations.en-US
dc.descriptionPatients with Diabetes Mellitus often have several medical problems and carry a burden imposed by their illness and treatment. Health care often ignores the values, preferences and context of patients, leading to treatments that do not fit into patients’ overwhelmed lives. Shared Decision Making (SDM) emerges as a way to answer the question: "What's best for the patient?". SDM promotes an empathic conversation between patients and clinicians that integrates the best evidence available with their values, preferences and context. We discuss three SDM approaches for patients with diabetes: one focused on sharing information, another on making choices, and a third one on helping patients and clinicians to talk about how to address the problems of living with diabetes and its comorbidities. Despite the benefits demonstrated in studies conducted in the U.S. and Europe, the implementation of SDM continues to be a challenge. In Latin America, healthcare and socio-economic conditions render the implementation of SDM more challenging. Research aimed to respond to this challenge is necessary. Meanwhile, clinicians can practice SDM by sharing evidence-based information, giving voice to patients’ values and preferences in making choices, and creating empathic conversations aimed at decisions aligned with patients’ context, dreams, goals, and life expectations.es-ES
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.languagespa
dc.publisherRevista Médica de Chilees-ES
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dc.sourceRevista Médica de Chile; Vol. 145, núm. 5 (2017): MAYO 2017es-ES
dc.source0034-9887
dc.subjectDecision Making; Decision Support Techniques; Diabetes Mellitus; Evidence-Based Medicineen-US
dc.subjectDecision Making; Decision Support Techniques; Diabetes Mellitus; Evidence-Based Medicinees-ES
dc.titleSHARED DECISION MAKING IN PATIENTS WITH DIABETES MELLITUSen-US
dc.titleToma de decisiones compartidas en la atención de pacientes con diabetes: un desafío para Latinoamérica.es-ES
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dc.typees-ES


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