In holism there is a belief that wellbeing is more than what is going on in the body physically in terms of illness or disease, but also on a deeper level with psychological, spiritual, emotional, social and environmental aspects. These aspects are all equally important and essential for optimal and sustainable health and wellbeing. In a holistic approach the health care provider aim to address and balance all pieces together to be able to prevent and solve any issues, illness or disorder (Dual Diagnosis, n.d.).
By analysing the physical, environmental, emotional, spiritual, nutritional and lifestyle elements, the person is treated as a whole. The focus is upon fixing the root cause and not just the current symptoms. Patient education and participation in the healing process is as important as the treatment itself as it requires commitment and an understanding from the patient.
In this paper we will look at a case study, where a mother of two has turned to holistic medicine in hope to cure the tiredness she is suffering from. She is a part time worker and in the last 6 months she have had several upper respiratory infections that keeps coming back. This paper will discuss how the patient can improve her life …show more content…
Wholeness means the person is treated and viewed as the entire unity of body, mind, spirit and all the other unique needs of every individual. An holistic approach is based on the nature of the person which makes the information that is given to the practitioner about the person’s whole life situation most significant (AIHM, n.d.). To achieve this the holistic health care practitioners strive to meet the patient with kindness and acceptance where the ideal practitioner-patient relationship is a partnership. An essential contributor to the person’s healing process is the quality of the relationship with the practitioner where needs and insights are valued (AIHM,