Baines D L
MedM Ltd, Endon House, 98 Stamford Avenue, Springfield, Milton Keynes MK6 3LQ.
Br J Gen Pract. 2001 Sep;51(470):749-52.
A range of easily identifiable characteristics is often used by researchers and general practitioners to categorise primary care practices. In the United Kingdom, for example, practices can be defined as dispensing, single-handed or training. The availability of routinely collected data has led to a growing research literature that links practice characteristics to their workload, performance and costs. This paper examines the use and limitations of this 'characteristics approach' and argues that this type of research is often undertaken because it is easy to perform rather than because it is the most appropriate way to study primary care. Using this approach may lead to failure to do the following: to account for the environmental factors that determine the effects particular characteristics manifest; to identify the true relationships between the observed characteristics; to control for changes in the effects of characteristics over time; to differentiate between the behaviour of individual members of a group with the same characteristic and that of the group as a whole; to assign the correct causality to relationships between practice characteristics, workloads, performance, and costs. The characteristics approach should be used with great caution by general practice researchers.
研究人员和全科医生常常依据一系列易于识别的特征对初级医疗实践进行分类。例如,在英国,医疗实践可被定义为配药型、单人执业型或培训型。常规收集数据的可得性催生了越来越多的研究文献,这些文献将实践特征与其工作量、绩效和成本联系起来。本文审视了这种“特征法”的用途及局限性,并指出开展这类研究往往是因为其操作简便,而非因为它是研究初级医疗的最合适方式。使用这种方法可能导致无法做到以下几点:考虑决定特定特征显现效果的环境因素;识别所观察特征之间的真实关系;控制特征效果随时间的变化;区分具有相同特征的群体中个体成员的行为与整个群体的行为;为实践特征、工作量、绩效和成本之间的关系确定正确的因果关系。全科医疗研究人员应极其谨慎地使用特征法。