A general systems approach to the patient, hospital staff, family, and community: implications for health care services |
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Authors: | L L Viney A M Clarke Y N Benjamin |
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Abstract: | This article concerns the application of a general systems concept to the health care system. A system consists of a set of interacting components which are interrelated and interdependent, and function as a unit. In order to identify some of the significant influences on the patient who has been hospitalized, this general systems concept has been applied to health care systems at a number of open systems levels in which he or she participates. These are the body-mind system of the patient (an organism); the patient-hospital staff system (an organization); the system relating the patient to his or her family (a group); and the patient-community system. Analyses of the strategic parts of these systems, their mutual dependencies and the processes which link them, together with their functions, have implications for both hospital-based health-care professionals and hospital administrators. These analyses are generalizable across these four levels of systems. Their implications have importance for health care services. |
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