Kiderman Alexander, Ilan Uri, Gur Itzhak, Bdolah-Abram Tali, Brezis Mayer
Clalit Health Services, Department of Family Medicine and the Center for Clinical Quality and Safety, Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel. Email:
J Fam Pract. 2013 Aug;62(8):408-13.
Primary care physicians sometimes encounter patients with clinical complaints that do not fit into a recognized diagnostic pattern. This study was undertaken to assess the way physicians respond to patients whose symptoms are unusual or unexplained that is, what approach they take in the absence of a working hypothesis.
We surveyed 130 primary care physicians affiliated with 3 academic centers in Israel, presenting 5 clinical vignettes describing patients who had unusual complaints, no clear diagnosis, and no apparent need for urgent care. We asked physicians to provide the most likely diagnosis for each case and to rate their level of confidence in that diagnosis;respondents were also asked to provide a management strategy for each case and their level of confidence in the chosen approach. Finally, we asked the physicians to estimate how many of their own patients have presentations similar to the individuals in the clinical vignettes.
Physicians proposed, on average, 22 diagnoses for each case. Most indicated that they would choose action (testing, consulting, sending the patient to the emergency department, or prescribing) rather than follow-up only (87% vs 13%; P<.01). Respondents' confidence in the management approach they had chosen for all the cases was higher than their confidence in the diagnoses (5.6 vs 4.3, respectively, on a scale of1-10; P<.001). Physicians estimated that 10% to 20% of the patients they see in their practice have unusual or unexplained symptoms that are difficult to diagnose.
Uncertain diagnosis is a regular challenge for primary care physicians. In such cases, we found that physicians prefer a workup to follow-up, an inclination consistent with“action bias.”
基层医疗医生有时会遇到临床症状不符合公认诊断模式的患者。本研究旨在评估医生对症状异常或无法解释的患者的应对方式,即他们在没有可行假设的情况下采取何种方法。
我们对以色列3个学术中心的130名基层医疗医生进行了调查,呈现了5个临床案例,描述了有异常症状、无明确诊断且无明显紧急护理需求的患者。我们要求医生为每个案例提供最可能的诊断,并对该诊断的信心程度进行评分;还要求受访者为每个案例提供管理策略以及对所选方法的信心程度。最后,我们要求医生估计他们自己的患者中有多少人的表现与临床案例中的个体相似。
医生平均为每个案例提出22种诊断。大多数医生表示他们会选择采取行动(检查、咨询、将患者送往急诊科或开处方),而不是仅进行随访(87%对13%;P<0.01)。受访者对他们为所有案例选择的管理方法的信心高于对诊断的信心(分别为5.6和4.3,评分范围为1至10;P<0.001)。医生估计,他们在实践中见到的患者中有10%至20%有异常或无法解释的症状,难以诊断。
诊断不确定是基层医疗医生经常面临的挑战。在这种情况下,我们发现医生更喜欢进行检查而不是随访,这种倾向与“行动偏差”一致。