Albertson G A, Lin C T, Kutner J, Schilling L M, Anderson S N, Anderson R J
Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado 80262, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2000 Apr;15(4):242-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2000.02208.x.
To determine the frequency and determinants of provider nonrecognition of patients' desires for specialist referral.
Prospective study.
Internal medicine clinic in an academic medical center providing primary care to patients enrolled in a managed care plan.
Twelve faculty internists serving as primary care providers (PCPs) for 856 patient visits.
Patients were given previsit and postvisit questionnaires asking about referral desire and visit satisfaction. Providers, blinded to patients' referral desire, were asked after the visit whether a referral was discussed, who initiated the referral discussion, and whether the referral was indicated. Providers failed to discuss referral with 27% of patients who indicated a definite desire for referral and with 56% of patients, who indicated a possible desire for referral. There was significant variability in provider recognition of patient referral desire. Recognition is defined as the provider indicating that a referral was discussed when the patient marked a definite or possible desire for referral. Provider recognition improved significantly (P <.05), when the patient had more than one referral desire, if the patient or a family member was a health care worker and when the patient noted a definite desire versus a possible desire for referral. Patients were more likely (P <.05) to initiate a referral discussion when they had seen the PCP previously and had more than one referral desire. Of patient-initiated referral requests, 14% were considered "not indicated" by PCPs. Satisfaction with care did not differ in patients with a referral desire that were referred and those that were nor referred.
These PCPs frequently failed to explicitly recognize patients' referral desires. Patients were more likely to initiate discussions of a referral desire when they saw their usual PCP and had more than a single referral desire.
确定医疗服务提供者未识别患者专科转诊意愿的频率及决定因素。
前瞻性研究。
一所学术医疗中心的内科诊所,为参加管理式医疗计划的患者提供初级保健服务。
12名内科教员担任初级保健提供者(PCP),负责856次患者就诊。
患者在就诊前和就诊后接受问卷调查,询问转诊意愿和就诊满意度。对患者转诊意愿不知情的医疗服务提供者在就诊后被问及是否讨论了转诊、谁发起了转诊讨论以及是否需要转诊。对于明确表示有转诊意愿的患者,27%的医疗服务提供者未与其讨论转诊;对于表示可能有转诊意愿的患者,56%的医疗服务提供者未与其讨论转诊。医疗服务提供者对患者转诊意愿的识别存在显著差异。识别的定义为,当患者明确或可能有转诊意愿时,医疗服务提供者表示讨论了转诊。当患者有不止一个转诊意愿、患者或其家庭成员是医护人员以及患者明确表示有转诊意愿而非可能有转诊意愿时,医疗服务提供者的识别率显著提高(P<.05)。当患者之前看过初级保健提供者且有不止一个转诊意愿时,他们更有可能发起转诊讨论(P<.05)。在患者发起的转诊请求中,14%被初级保健提供者认为“不必要”。有转诊意愿且被转诊的患者与未被转诊的患者对医疗服务的满意度没有差异。
这些初级保健提供者经常未能明确识别患者的转诊意愿。当患者看他们的常规初级保健提供者且有不止一个转诊意愿时,他们更有可能发起关于转诊意愿的讨论。