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The Diabetes Educator

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Journal of Holistic Nursing
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Comprehensive versus Holistic Care

Case Studies of Chronic Disease

June Hart Romeo, Ph.D., R.N., N.P.-C.

Cleveland State University

Persons with chronic disease often experience an involvement of multiple body systems. A comprehensive care approach to patient care is often used with the belief that a health care team will ensure that a patient’s needs will be covered. Instead, this approach is reductionist in practice and leads to fragmentation of care, and the difficult patients often slip through the cracks of the health care system. However, a holistic theory-based approach puts a patient’s perceived needs first and offers care not only for the body but also for the human spirit. Two case studies of patients with chronic disease are reviewed, both of whom began in a comprehensive care model and ended up with holistic care. Suggestions for assisting in the movement of a comprehensive care model toward a holistic model are offered for the practicing nurse.

Journal of Holistic Nursing, Vol. 18, No. 4, 352-361 (2000)
DOI: 10.1177/089801010001800406


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