Abstract

Aims: The modern medical model has been transformed into a biopsychosocial model. The integration of the biopsychosocial approach in healthcare can help improve the effectiveness of diagnosis and treatment. This study explored the actual application of the biopsychosocial approach in healthcare and provides a basis for targeted interventions to promote the biopsychosocial approach in healthcare.Methods: Study 1 involved one-on-one interviews with 30 medical staff and focus group interviews with 16 recent patients. Study 2 was a cross-sectional survey of 13,105 medical staff in Hangzhou, China that analyzed the status quo implementation of the biopsychosocial approach in healthcare.Results: Study 1 found that medical staff did not welcome patients to report information unrelated to their disease, hoping patients did not express their emotions. In the treatment process, patients believed that medical staff refused to attend to or did not encourage reporting of any information other than the disease, and that patients should have reasonable expectations for medical staff. Study 2 found that medical staff had a 37.5% probability of actively paying attention to the patient's psychosocial status. Female medical staff (38.5%) were actively concerned about the patient's psychosocial status significantly more than male medical staff (34.2%) (P < 0.01). The medical staff in the psychiatric department (58.4%) paid more active attention to the patient's psychosocial status than staff in the non-psychiatric departments (37.2%). Gender, department, hospital level, and professional title were the factors associated with the medical staff's attention to the patient's psychosocial status (P < 0.05). The influence of age on the probability of medical staff actively paying attention to the psychosocial status of patients increased with the number of years of employment. Participants that were 31–40 years old, had an intermediate professional title, and 11–15 years of employment were the least likely to actively pay attention to patients' psychosocial status.Conclusion: Although the biopsychosocial approach has been popularized for many years, it has not been widely used in medical care. Medical staff pay more attention to patients' physical symptoms and less attention to patients' psychosocial status. It is recommended that training will be provided to medical personnel on implementing a biopsychosocial approach with particular attention to the sociodemographic characteristics of medical personnel. Additionally, we propose helping patients set reasonable expectations, and formulating guidelines for implementing the biopsychosocial approach.

Highlights

  • With the changes in the spectrum of human diseases, understanding psychological disorders and symptoms continue to deepen

  • “The patients only need to talk about the disease and what is related to the disease during the communication with medical staff, and not mention other content.” (A male orthopedic doctor who has worked for 10 years)

  • “I hope that the patients will not confide their emotions to the medical staff.” (A female doctor in the gastroenterology department who has worked for 3 years)

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Summary

Introduction

With the changes in the spectrum of human diseases, understanding psychological disorders and symptoms continue to deepen. People have become increasingly aware that no single reason could cause the appearance of symptoms, and psychological and social factors need to be considered. In 1977, Engel (1) pointed out the limitations of the biomedical model, integrated psychological and social dimensions, and proposed a biopsychosocial approach. Engel held the view that disease is the result of the interaction of biological, psychological, and social subsystems on multiple levels and highlighted the indispensable role of psychosocial factors, which explained such phenomena as the effect of living conditions on the development of the disease. With the recognition that some risk factors of the disease are psychosocial rather than biomedical, and that some non-pharmacologic and non-surgical treatment modalities have a therapeutic effect, the biopsychosocial approach potentially improves clinical outcomes for chronic diseases and functional illnesses seen in primary care (11). The biopsychosocial approach in healthcare can improve the effectiveness of diagnosis and treatment (12), which enhances patient satisfaction and can ease conflicts between doctors and patients

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