So a diabetic patient says I don't want to attend renal, ophthalmology, cardiology consults and check my HB1AC. Just give me more insulin. I thought doctors were meant to promote better outcomes. Going by a patient-orientated approach you are essentially giving them a death sentence.
This is just my personal opinion, if I meet a patient who does not give a rats ass about their own health I would automatically tell them to find a new doctor. This makes my life easier and I can actually spend more time and effort for patients that actually want better outcomes for their health. So that makes me a bad doctor? Perhaps you should respect other doctor's opinions too. Unless you want to dedicate your whole life to being altruistic in which, case you should work in a low income area and bulk bill everyone because specialists fees are insane. I'll be more than happy to refer my non-compliant ignorant patients to you in the future.
that is not what patient-oriented care is about and that example demonstrates you have no idea what you are talking about or what it even means.
"Going by a patient-orientated approach you are essentially giving them a death sentence. "
The sheer arrogance in this statement is astounding, like you assume a patient does not know whether they want to live or not and patients cannot make decisions for themselves. As a doctor you're never supposed to force treatment on a patient, do you seriously not know the basics of consent? Your job is to inform a patient of their options, provide an informed opinion of each and which option would be best for them, pros and cons of each and then they decide if they wish to pursue it. Like no offence, but if you can say something like a patient-oriented approach is a death sentence you really need to go back to first year because patient-oriented care is something taught from the get-go and judging by your example and comments you have little to no understanding of what it actually entails
Let me show you this quote from the Wikipedia article on Patient-oriented care
"Patient-centered care is about much more than simply educating patients about a diagnosis, potential treatment, or healthy behavior.
It does not mean giving patients whatever they want; rather, patients want guidance from their care providers, but they expect that guidance to be provided in the context of full and unbiased information about options, benefits and risks."
It's not about giving them whatever medication or drug they want, it's about fully informing them of the options they have, pros and cons and potential outcomes and allowing them to choose the treatment and management that is best for them, because what you might think is their primary concern isn't necessary what they feel is their primary concern. Take for example the fact that some cancer patients are not given anti-emetics etc. because those responsible for their care are so fixated on treating the cancer they neglect that the patient has other concerns too, such as nausea.
Being a doctor isn't about making your life easier, it's about making your patient's life easier, that quote kinda demonstrates that your true priority lies in just treating people you are comfortable with and who make your job easy rather than treating everyone equally. Also as i have stated *numerous* times before, just because a patient is non-compliant that doesn't mean they do not want better health outcomes for themselves. Clearly the fact they have come to you MEANS they want better health outcomes for themselves. And yes if you cannot appreciate a patient's autonomy, if you cannot respect your patients, if you judge your patients based on your own moral code and what is "easier" for you, if you have no understanding of patient-oriented care, if you think being altruistic or caring for your patient's health is a bad thing and worth criticising, if you insult them as "retarded" or "ignorant" without even considering there might be legitimate factors leading to their non-compliance (which you probably didn't establish due to poor rapport or not caring enough to ask) then true it doesn't make you a bad doctor, it makes you someone who isn't a doctor at all because it violates the very principles of what healthcare is based on, including the declaration of geneva:
I will not permit considerations of age, disease or disability, creed, ethnic origin, gender, nationality, political affiliation, race, sexual orientation, social standing or
any other factor to intervene between my duty and my patient;
I will not use my medical knowledge to violate human rights and civil liberties, even under threat;
In case you are unfamiliar with the concept of human rights it is important to note the first quote is a human right given in the Declaration that indicates that you should not let any personal judgement intervene in your treatment of the patient, that includes refusing to give them treatment that will be beneficial to them. In fact that violates an earlier part of the declaration which states that your duty is to try your best to provide better health outcomes for a patient, giving up on them because you don't like them is not trying your best and violates this.
Not to mention it violates that second quote as a lack of respect for patient autonomy and a lack of respect for what their concerns are with their health is a violation of the basic liberties any human being should have