Greer Joseph, Halgin Richard
Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Psychosom Med. 2006 Mar-Apr;68(2):277-82. doi: 10.1097/01.psy.0000203239.74461.db.
Primary care patients often report medically unexplained symptoms and may disagree with their physicians about the nature of their presenting complaints. The goals of this study were to explore the level of physician-patient agreement on symptom etiology and to identify predictors of disagreement.
Primary care patients (n = 175) and their physicians rated the extent to which patients' presenting symptoms represented a medical versus a psychological problem. Patients also completed surveys regarding their demographic characteristics, level of psychological distress, health status, recent stress, history of mental health treatment, and reason for office visit.
Physicians and patients agreed on the etiology of symptoms in approximately 59% of the cases. Patient sex, history of mental health treatment, and reason for office visit significantly predicted agreement on symptom etiology. Physicians perceived patients with whom they disagreed about symptom etiology as less cooperative.
Physician-patient agreement on symptom etiology is low and relates to several patient psychosocial and demographic factors. Identifying the variables associated with disagreement may help to improve communication and patient outcomes in primary care.
基层医疗患者常常报告有医学上无法解释的症状,并且可能在当前症状的性质上与医生存在分歧。本研究的目的是探讨医患双方在症状病因方面的一致程度,并确定分歧的预测因素。
基层医疗患者(n = 175)及其医生对患者当前症状代表医疗问题还是心理问题的程度进行评分。患者还完成了关于其人口统计学特征、心理困扰程度、健康状况、近期压力、心理健康治疗史以及就诊原因的调查。
在大约59%的病例中,医生和患者在症状病因上达成了一致。患者性别、心理健康治疗史以及就诊原因显著预测了在症状病因上的一致性。医生认为在症状病因上与他们存在分歧的患者不太合作。
医患双方在症状病因上的一致性较低,并且与几个患者的社会心理和人口统计学因素有关。识别与分歧相关的变量可能有助于改善基层医疗中的沟通和患者治疗效果。