@article{discovery1560578,
         journal = {The New Bioethics},
            year = {2017},
           title = {The Human Dimension: Putting the Person into Personalised Medicine},
          number = {1},
           month = {May},
           pages = {38--48},
            note = {This version is the author accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher's terms and conditions.},
          volume = {23},
             url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20502877.2017.1314894},
            issn = {2050-2885},
          author = {Horne, R},
        abstract = {Technological advances enabling us to personalise medical interventions at the biological level must be matched by parallel advances in how we support the informed choices essential to patient and public participation. We cannot take participation for granted. To be truly personalised, medicine must take account of the perceptions and capabilities that shape participation. To do this, we need a better understanding of how people perceive personalised medicine and how they judge its value and risks. To realise the promise of 4P medicine we need to personalise at the psychosocial as well as biological dimension, putting the person into personalised medicine.},
        keywords = {4P medicine, behaviour, beliefs, engagement, idiosyncrasia, illness perceptions, necessity concerns framework, patient and public perceptions, personalised medicine, psychosocial aspects, stratified medicine}
}