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The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine 20 (1): 85-92 (2007)
DOI: 10.3122/jabfm.2007.01.060012
© 2007 American Board of Family Medicine
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Special Communication

Family Medicine and the Life Course Paradigm

Timothy P. Daaleman, DO, MPH and Glen H. Elder, Jr, PhD

From the Department of Family Medicine, Program on Aging, Disability, and Long-Term Care, Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research (TPD), and Department of Sociology, Carolina Population Center (GHE), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC

Correspondence: Corresponding author: Timothy P. Daaleman, DO, MPH, Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Campus Box 7595, Manning Drive, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 (E-mail: tim_daaleman{at}med.unc.edu)

A unique characteristic of family physicians is that they seek to understand individual patients within the context of their families and larger social environments. Unfortunately, the intellectual development of family medicine is hampered by the reliance on epidemiologic, health service, and biomedical paradigms that are limited in their contextual perspectives on patients’ lives. However, another paradigm, that of the life course, represents an interdisciplinary framework that views persons in context over time. It provides an ecological understanding of individual people by examining phenomena at the nexus of social pathways, developmental or health trajectories, and social change. A life course paradigm provides a way of thinking about patients in both proximal (eg, lived lives and family) and distal (eg, health care system) contexts over a life span. Five core principles define the life course as a paradigmatic framework: (1) human development and aging as lifelong processes, (2) human agency, (3) historical time and place, (4) the timing of events in a life, and (5) linked lives. At the individual level, the life course orients physicians to the opportunities and constraints that frame the health care choices, plans, and initiatives of people who maintain health and also face illness. At the organizational level, the life course offers an intellectual infrastructure for the New Model of Family Medicine by depicting an idealized delivery system that may be longitudinally integrated. It also emphasizes health and illness trajectories by linking health and other service organizations that assist individuals at different stages of their lives.





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T. P. Daaleman
The Medical Home: Locus of Physician Formation
J Am Board Fam Med, September 1, 2008; 21(5): 451 - 457.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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