Swarztrauber Kari, Vickrey Barbara G, Mittman Brian S
Department of Neurology, Portland VA Medical Center and Oregon Health Sciences University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road, Mail Code L-226, Portland, OR 97201, USA.
Med Care. 2002 Dec;40(12):1196-209. doi: 10.1097/00005650-200212000-00007.
Recent changes in the US health care system have produced questions about the appropriate roles and responsibilities of generalist and specialist physicians within a primary care-centered health care delivery system.
To determine neurologists' and primary care physicians' preferences for specialist involvement in the management of common neurologic conditions and the factors influencing these preferences.
A self-administered questionnaire was developed with the assistance of a multispecialty Advisory Board and sent to a stratified probability sample of 608 family physicians, 624 general internists, and 492 neurologists.
The questionnaire contained three clinical scenarios, each followed by questions regarding respondent preferences for the primary care physician to manage alone, curbside, or refer to a specialist. The questionnaire also contained knowledge questions corresponding to each scenario and physician and practice characteristics questions.
Response rate was 60%. For all three scenarios, primary care physicians' preferences to involve a specialist differed substantially from neurologists' preferences, with nearly all neurologists preferring involvement of a specialist. Primary care physicians with less knowledge were more likely to prefer assistance from a neurologist. Physician age and practice setting influenced the type of assistance preferred (curbside vs. referral). Utilization management techniques and financial incentives had little influence on physician preferences to involve a specialist.
The extensive disagreement between primary care physicians' and specialists' preferences for specialty involvement represents cause for considerable concern, supporting further efforts to identify where inappropriate referral processes are occurring and to implement mechanisms for improving the coordination and quality of primary and specialty care.
美国医疗保健系统最近的变化引发了关于在以初级保健为中心的医疗保健提供系统中,全科医生和专科医生的适当角色与职责的问题。
确定神经科医生和初级保健医生对于专科医生参与常见神经系统疾病管理的偏好以及影响这些偏好的因素。
在一个多专业咨询委员会的协助下编制了一份自填式问卷,并发送给608名家庭医生、624名普通内科医生和492名神经科医生的分层概率样本。
问卷包含三个临床病例,每个病例后都有关于受访者对于由初级保健医生单独管理、私下咨询或转诊给专科医生的偏好的问题。问卷还包含与每个病例对应的知识问题以及医生和执业特征问题。
回复率为60%。对于所有三个病例,初级保健医生和神经科医生对于专科医生参与其中的偏好存在很大差异,几乎所有神经科医生都倾向于专科医生参与进来。知识较少的初级保健医生更有可能希望得到神经科医生的帮助。医生的年龄和执业环境影响了所偏好的帮助类型(私下咨询与转诊)。利用管理技术和经济激励措施对医生关于专科医生参与的偏好影响很小。
初级保健医生和专科医生对于专科医生参与的偏好之间存在广泛分歧,这令人相当担忧,支持进一步努力去查明在何处出现了不适当的转诊流程,并实施改善初级保健和专科保健协调与质量的机制。