Deveugele Myriam, Derese Anselm, van den Brink-Muinen Atie, Bensing Jozien, De Maeseneer Jan
Department of General Practice and Primary Health Care, Ghent University, B 9000 Ghent, Belgium.
BMJ. 2002 Aug 31;325(7362):472. doi: 10.1136/bmj.325.7362.472.
To compare determinants of consultation length discussed in the literature with those found in consultations with general practitioners from different European countries; to explore the determinants of consultation length, particularly the effect of doctors' and patients' perceptions of psychosocial aspects.
Analysis of videotaped consultations of general practitioners from the Eurocommunication study and of questionnaires completed by doctors and by patients.
General practices in six European countries.
190 general practitioners and 3674 patients.
In a multilevel analysis with three levels (country, general practitioner, and patient), country and doctor variables contributed a similar amount to the total variance in consultation length (23% and 22%, respectively) and patient variables accounted for 55% of the variance. The variables used in the multilevel analysis explained 25% of the total variation. The country in which the doctor practised, combined with the doctors' variables, was as important for the variance in consultation length as the variation between patients. Consultations in which psychosocial problems were considered important by the doctor and the patient lasted longer than consultations about biomedical problems only. The doctor's perception had more influence in this situation than the patient's. Consultation length is influenced by the patients' sex (women got longer consultations), whether the practice was urban or rural, the number of new problems discussed in the consultation (the more problems the longer the consultation), and the patient's age (the older the patient the longer the consultation). As a doctor's workload increased, the length of consultations decreased. The general practitioner's sex or age and patient's level of education were not related to the length of consultation.
Consultation length is determined by variables related to the doctor and the doctor's country as well as by those related to patients. Women consulting in an urban practice with problems perceived as psychosocial have longer consultations than other patients.
比较文献中讨论的会诊时长决定因素与不同欧洲国家全科医生会诊中发现的决定因素;探讨会诊时长的决定因素,尤其是医生和患者对心理社会因素的认知所产生的影响。
对欧洲交流研究中的全科医生会诊录像以及医生和患者填写的问卷进行分析。
六个欧洲国家的全科医疗诊所。
190名全科医生和3674名患者。
在一个包含三个层次(国家、全科医生和患者)的多层次分析中,国家和医生变量对会诊时长总方差的贡献量相似(分别为23%和22%),患者变量占方差的55%。多层次分析中使用的变量解释了总变异的25%。医生执业所在的国家,结合医生变量,对会诊时长方差的影响与患者之间的变异一样重要。医生和患者都认为心理社会问题重要的会诊比仅涉及生物医学问题的会诊持续时间更长。在这种情况下,医生的认知比患者的认知影响更大。会诊时长受患者性别(女性会诊时间更长)、诊所位于城市还是农村、会诊中讨论的新问题数量(问题越多,会诊时间越长)以及患者年龄(患者年龄越大,会诊时间越长)的影响。随着医生工作量的增加,会诊时长会减少。全科医生的性别或年龄以及患者的教育水平与会诊时长无关。
会诊时长由与医生及其所在国家相关的变量以及与患者相关的变量决定。在城市诊所就诊且被认为存在心理社会问题的女性患者,会诊时间比其他患者更长。