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Goal-Oriented Healthcare: Breaking Free from the Problem-Focused Paradigm | Dr. James Mold (University of Oklahoma)

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Content provided by Inspiring Clinicians to Thrive. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Inspiring Clinicians to Thrive or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

"The way to prevent cascades is to keep your eye on the goal, to understand what you're trying to accomplish and not to go down rabbit holes chasing abnormalities, but rather to be focused on the outcome that you're looking for."

— Dr James Mold

Listen now on Apple, Spotify, YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts.

Dr James W. Mold is a family medicine physician, geriatrician, researcher and academic with a Master of Public Health degree and is Professor Emeritus at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Centre. His pioneering research focuses on transforming healthcare from a problem-oriented to a goal-oriented paradigm, addressing the limitations of traditional problem-focused approaches. For over 20 years, in collaboration with the Oklahoma Physicians Resource/Research Network (OKPRN), Dr Mold has completed more than 75 major projects, resulting in more than 100 publications.

Key Takeaways

Clinical cascades are preventable through goal focus: Unnecessary medical interventions often cascade from initial anxiety-driven decisions. Maintaining focus on patient outcomes rather than chasing every abnormality prevents harmful escalation.

The problem-oriented paradigm has reached its limits: While effective for acute, single problems, traditional disease-focused medicine struggles with the reality that all patients have multiple risk factors and complex needs.

Four universal healthcare goals exist naturally: Every patient wants to survive as long as possible, maintain quality of life, have a good death, and continue personal growth—goals that require individual understanding rather than standardised approaches.

Practice-based research networks bridge the research-practice gap: Successful implementation requires trusting practitioners, addressing their real-world questions, and providing ongoing facilitation support rather than just education.

Goal-oriented care is more satisfying and effective: This approach makes medicine more enjoyable for providers while resonating strongly with patients, though system constraints make adoption challenging.

Where to Find Dr James Mold

* LinkedIn

In This Episode

01:07 - Early experiences in family medicine and the humanising revolution

05:40 - Transition from family practice to academic geriatrics

10:31 - The cascade effect: when one decision spirals into unnecessary care

15:32 - Building practice-based research networks and learning from practitioners

22:00 - Implementation research and the "aeroplane repair in mid-flight" challenge

26:45 - The problem-oriented paradigm: how we got here and why it's failing

33:57 - Goal-oriented healthcare: the four universal goals every patient has

40:47 - Implementation challenges and global adoption of goal-oriented care

Referenced

* The Cascade Effect in the Clinical Care of Patients (Paper)

* Goal-Oriented Prevention: How to Fit a Square Peg into a Round Hole (Paper)

* The Law of Diminishing Returns in Clinical Medicine: How Much Risk Reduction is Enough? (Paper)

* Thomas Kuhn's "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions" (Book)

* Failure of the Problem-Oriented Medical Paradigm and a Person-Centred Alternative (Paper)

* Oklahoma Physicians Resource Research Network (Link)

* Practice-based research network methodology (Link)

Contact

Contact Information: If you have any feedback, questions or if you'd like to get in touch, reach out at [email protected]

👍 Hey there - if you're enjoying this episode, make sure you share it with a friend! Thank you for your support.


This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.clinicalchangemakers.com
  continue reading

24 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 485292904 series 3485842
Content provided by Inspiring Clinicians to Thrive. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Inspiring Clinicians to Thrive or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

"The way to prevent cascades is to keep your eye on the goal, to understand what you're trying to accomplish and not to go down rabbit holes chasing abnormalities, but rather to be focused on the outcome that you're looking for."

— Dr James Mold

Listen now on Apple, Spotify, YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts.

Dr James W. Mold is a family medicine physician, geriatrician, researcher and academic with a Master of Public Health degree and is Professor Emeritus at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Centre. His pioneering research focuses on transforming healthcare from a problem-oriented to a goal-oriented paradigm, addressing the limitations of traditional problem-focused approaches. For over 20 years, in collaboration with the Oklahoma Physicians Resource/Research Network (OKPRN), Dr Mold has completed more than 75 major projects, resulting in more than 100 publications.

Key Takeaways

Clinical cascades are preventable through goal focus: Unnecessary medical interventions often cascade from initial anxiety-driven decisions. Maintaining focus on patient outcomes rather than chasing every abnormality prevents harmful escalation.

The problem-oriented paradigm has reached its limits: While effective for acute, single problems, traditional disease-focused medicine struggles with the reality that all patients have multiple risk factors and complex needs.

Four universal healthcare goals exist naturally: Every patient wants to survive as long as possible, maintain quality of life, have a good death, and continue personal growth—goals that require individual understanding rather than standardised approaches.

Practice-based research networks bridge the research-practice gap: Successful implementation requires trusting practitioners, addressing their real-world questions, and providing ongoing facilitation support rather than just education.

Goal-oriented care is more satisfying and effective: This approach makes medicine more enjoyable for providers while resonating strongly with patients, though system constraints make adoption challenging.

Where to Find Dr James Mold

* LinkedIn

In This Episode

01:07 - Early experiences in family medicine and the humanising revolution

05:40 - Transition from family practice to academic geriatrics

10:31 - The cascade effect: when one decision spirals into unnecessary care

15:32 - Building practice-based research networks and learning from practitioners

22:00 - Implementation research and the "aeroplane repair in mid-flight" challenge

26:45 - The problem-oriented paradigm: how we got here and why it's failing

33:57 - Goal-oriented healthcare: the four universal goals every patient has

40:47 - Implementation challenges and global adoption of goal-oriented care

Referenced

* The Cascade Effect in the Clinical Care of Patients (Paper)

* Goal-Oriented Prevention: How to Fit a Square Peg into a Round Hole (Paper)

* The Law of Diminishing Returns in Clinical Medicine: How Much Risk Reduction is Enough? (Paper)

* Thomas Kuhn's "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions" (Book)

* Failure of the Problem-Oriented Medical Paradigm and a Person-Centred Alternative (Paper)

* Oklahoma Physicians Resource Research Network (Link)

* Practice-based research network methodology (Link)

Contact

Contact Information: If you have any feedback, questions or if you'd like to get in touch, reach out at [email protected]

👍 Hey there - if you're enjoying this episode, make sure you share it with a friend! Thank you for your support.


This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.clinicalchangemakers.com
  continue reading

24 episodes

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