Abstract

This paper argues that “functional,” “medically unexplained,” or “somatoform” symptoms and disorders necessarily require a patient-centered approach from the clinicians. In the first part, I address the multiple causes of the patients' suffering and I analyze the unease of the doctors faced with these disorders. I emphasize the iatrogenic role of medical investigations and the frequent failure in attempting to reassure the patients. I stress the difficulties in finding the right terms and concepts, despite overabundant nosological categories, to give a full account of psychosomatic complexity. Finally, I discuss the moral dimension attached to assigning a symptom, at times arbitrarily, to a psychogenic origin. The following part presents a brief reminder of the patient-centered approach (PCA) in medicine. In the last part, I aim to explain why and how patient-centered medicine should be applied in the context of functional disorders. First, because PCA focuses on the patients' experience of illness rather than the disease from the medical point of view, which is, indeed, absent. Second, because PCA is the only way to avoid sterile attribution conflicts. Last, because PCA allows doctors and patients to collaboratively create plausible and non-stigmatizing explanations for the symptoms, which paves the way toward effective management.

Highlights

  • PCA is nothing new, this paper argues that its actual practice in clinical encounters with patients is a necessary condition for the management of functional symptoms and bodily distress

  • Most “somatizing” patients offer metaphors and sketches of explanations for their symptoms, on which doctors can help construct a shared model of psychosomatic entanglement contributing to the genesis of symptoms as predisposing, triggering, or perpetuating factors

  • Functional symptoms and syndromes and “medically unexplained” or “psychosomatic” problems remain a blind spot of medicine

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Summary

Pascal Cathébras*

Reviewed by: Charlotte Markert, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany Sebastian Kohlmann, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany. This paper argues that “functional,” “medically unexplained,” or “somatoform” symptoms and disorders necessarily require a patient-centered approach from the clinicians. I address the multiple causes of the patients’ suffering and I analyze the unease of the doctors faced with these disorders. The following part presents a brief reminder of the patient-centered approach (PCA) in medicine. I aim to explain why and how patient-centered medicine should be applied in the context of functional disorders. Because PCA focuses on the patients’ experience of illness rather than the disease from the medical point of view, which is, absent. Because PCA allows doctors and patients to collaboratively create plausible and non-stigmatizing explanations for the symptoms, which paves the way toward effective management

CORE ISSUES POSED BY FUNCTIONAL DISORDERS
The Fear of Diagnostic Errors and the Management of Uncertainty
The Traps of Nosology
The Moral Valence of Dualism and the Problem of Legitimacy
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
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