School of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Manchester, Stopford Building, Oxford Rd, Manchester M13 9PT, UK.
Res Social Adm Pharm. 2011 Mar;7(1):4-15. doi: 10.1016/j.sapharm.2010.02.002. Epub 2010 Apr 10.
The influence of patient expectations and demands on the decisions of prescribers in general practice has been associated with irrational prescribing and lack of evidence-based practice. However, to our knowledge, no one has investigated patient pressure to prescribe in secondary care.
To investigate the influences on hospital prescribers' decisions by exploring what they found uncomfortable when prescribing.
Qualitative interviews with 48 prescribers of varying seniority from 4 hospitals were conducted. Interviews were based on the critical incident technique, and prescribers were asked, before an interview, to remember any uncomfortable prescribing decisions that they had made; these were then discussed in detail during an interview. This approach allowed the interviewer to explore the more general influences on the decision to prescribe. Interviews were tape recorded and transcribed verbatim. A grounded theory approach to data analysis was taken.
Prescribers discussed various factors that could provoke feelings of discomfort when prescribing. Pressure on the prescribing decision from patients, relatives, or carers was a major theme, and more than half of interviewees discussed discomfort caused by such perceived pressure on the prescribing decision. How prescribers dealt with this pressure varied with seniority and the type of relationship that they had fostered with the patient. Nearly half of all incidents of patient pressure resulted in the patient being prescribed the medication they requested. Yet, many of these requests were deemed inappropriate by the prescriber. Their reasons for capitulation varied but included maintaining a good prescriber-patient relationship and avoiding conflict in the wider health care team.
Pressure from patients, relatives, or carers was an uncomfortable influence on these hospital prescribers' prescribing decisions. Increasingly consumer-driven health care will intensify these issues in the future. We advocate further research, focusing on managing patient demands and improving prescribers' coping strategies.
患者的期望和需求对全科医生决策的影响与不合理处方和缺乏循证实践有关。然而,据我们所知,没有人调查过二级保健中患者要求处方的压力。
通过探讨医生开处方时感到不舒服的原因,调查这些因素对医院开处方医生决策的影响。
对 4 家医院的 48 名不同级别医生进行了定性访谈。访谈基于关键事件技术,在访谈前,要求医生回忆他们曾做出过的任何感到不舒服的处方决策;然后在访谈中详细讨论这些决策。这种方法使访谈者能够探讨对处方决策有更普遍影响的因素。访谈进行了录音并逐字记录。采用扎根理论方法进行数据分析。
医生讨论了在开处方时可能引起不适的各种因素。来自患者、家属或护理人员的处方决策压力是一个主要主题,超过一半的受访者讨论了因这种感知到的处方决策压力而引起的不适。医生如何应对这种压力因资历和与患者建立的关系类型而异。几乎一半的患者压力事件导致患者按要求开了药。然而,这些要求中有许多被医生认为是不适当的。他们屈服的原因各不相同,包括保持良好的医患关系和避免在更广泛的医疗团队中产生冲突。
来自患者、家属或护理人员的压力是这些医院开处方医生处方决策的一个令人不适的影响因素。未来,日益以消费者为导向的医疗保健将加剧这些问题。我们主张进行进一步的研究,重点是管理患者的需求和提高医生的应对策略。