Donohoe M T, Kravitz R L, Wheeler D B, Chandra R, Chen A, Humphries N
Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program, Stanford, Calif., USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 1999 May;14(5):281-6. doi: 10.1046/j.1525-1497.1999.00324.x.
To determine the relative importance of medical and nonmedical factors influencing generalists' decisions to refer, and of the factors that might avert unnecessary referrals.
Prospective survey of all referrals from generalists to subspecialists over a 5-month period.
University hospital outpatient clinics.
Fifty-seven staff physicians in general internal medicine, family medicine, dermatology, orthopedics, gastroenterology, and rheumatology.
For each referral, the generalist rated a number of medical and nonmedical reasons for referral, as well as factors that may have helped avert the referral; the specialist seeing the patient then rated the appropriateness, timeliness, and complexity of the referral. Both physicians rated the potential avoidability of the referral by telephone consultation. Generalists were influenced by a combination of both medical and nonmedical reasons for 76% of the referrals, by only medical reasons in 20%, and by only nonmedical reasons in 3%. In 33% of all referrals, generalists felt that training in simple procedures or communication with a generalist or specialist colleague would have allowed them to avoid referral. Specialists felt that the vast majority of referrals were timely (as opposed to premature or delayed) and of average complexity. Although specialists rated most referrals as appropriate, 30% were rated as possibly appropriate or inappropriate. Generalists and specialists failed to agree on the avoidability of 34% of referrals.
Generalists made most referrals for a combination of medical and nonmedical reasons, and many referrals were considered avoidable. Increasing procedural training for generalists and enhancing informal channels of communication between generalists and subspecialists might result in more appropriate referrals at lower cost.
确定影响全科医生转诊决策的医学和非医学因素的相对重要性,以及可能避免不必要转诊的因素。
对全科医生在5个月内转给专科医生的所有转诊病例进行前瞻性调查。
大学医院门诊。
57名在内科、家庭医学、皮肤科、骨科、胃肠病学和风湿病学领域的执业医师。
对于每一次转诊,全科医生对转诊的一些医学和非医学原因以及可能有助于避免转诊的因素进行评分;诊治该患者的专科医生随后对转诊的适当性、及时性和复杂性进行评分。两位医生均通过电话咨询对转诊的潜在可避免性进行评分。76%的转诊病例中,全科医生受到医学和非医学原因的综合影响,20%仅受医学原因影响,3%仅受非医学原因影响。在所有转诊病例中,33%的全科医生认为,简单操作培训或与全科医生或专科医生同事沟通本可使他们避免转诊。专科医生认为绝大多数转诊是及时的(与过早或延迟相反)且复杂性为中等。尽管专科医生将大多数转诊评为适当,但30%被评为可能适当或不适当。全科医生和专科医生在34%的转诊病例的可避免性上未能达成一致。
全科医生进行的大多数转诊是医学和非医学原因共同作用的结果,许多转诊被认为是可避免的。增加对全科医生的操作培训以及加强全科医生与专科医生之间的非正式沟通渠道,可能会以更低成本实现更适当的转诊。