Rosendal Marianne, Carlsen Anders Helles, Rask Mette Troellund
Department of Public Health, Research Unit for General Practice, Aarhus University, Bartholins Alle 2, DK-8000, Aarhus C, Denmark.
BMC Fam Pract. 2016 Mar 10;17:29. doi: 10.1186/s12875-016-0429-8.
Symptoms are common in primary care. Besides providing thorough assessment of possible severe disease, the general practitioner (GP) must ensure good health care to all patients, irrespective of diagnoses. We aimed to explore patient satisfaction with the provided care and how well expectations in patients were met when no diagnosis was made during the consultation.
Cross-sectional study based on a questionnaire survey conducted in 2008-2009 among 377 GPs and their patients in the Central Denmark Region. A total of 2286 patients completed a questionnaire after the consultation (response rate: 54 %). The questionnaire included four satisfaction items from the EUROPEP instrument and a question about unmet expectations. For each patient, the GP answered a one-page registration form including information about the main problem in the consultation, chronic disorders and assessment of prognosis. Statistical analyses were adjusted for patient characteristics and GP clustering.
A higher proportion of patients reported illness worry (20 vs. 17 %, p-value: 0.005), unmet expectations (17 vs. 13 %, p-value: 0.019) and dissatisfaction with their GP after the consultation when no diagnosis was made. Dissatisfaction was primarily related to the medical examination (adjusted OR 1.30; 95 % CI: 1.06-1.60) and GP explanations (adjusted OR 1.40; 95 % CI: 1.14-1.71). Exploratory analyses revealed an association between dissatisfaction with examination and the GP assessment that symptoms were unrelated to biomedical disease. This association was found both in patients with 'symptoms only' and patients given a specific diagnosis.
GPs are challenged by patients presenting symptoms that do not fit the patterns of biomedical diagnoses. The current study demonstrates more illness worry, unmet expectations and dissatisfaction with the consultation in these patients compared to patients receiving a diagnosis. This trend is true for all patients assessed as having 'symptoms only' at the end of a consultation and not only for the minority group with 'medically unexplained symptoms'. As primary care is the frontline of the health-care system, symptoms are managed as the main problem in almost one in three consultations. It is about time that we take the same professional approach to symptoms as we have done for years to biomedical disease.
症状在初级保健中很常见。除了对可能的严重疾病进行全面评估外,全科医生(GP)必须确保为所有患者提供良好的医疗服务,无论诊断结果如何。我们旨在探讨患者对所提供医疗服务的满意度,以及在会诊期间未做出诊断时患者的期望得到满足的程度。
基于2008 - 2009年在丹麦中部地区对377名全科医生及其患者进行的问卷调查的横断面研究。共有2286名患者在会诊后完成了问卷(回复率:54%)。问卷包括来自欧洲患者满意度调查工具(EUROPEP)的四个满意度项目以及一个关于未满足期望的问题。对于每位患者,全科医生填写了一份单页登记表,包括会诊中的主要问题、慢性疾病以及预后评估等信息。统计分析针对患者特征和全科医生聚类进行了调整。
当会诊未做出诊断时,更高比例的患者报告有疾病担忧(20%对17%,p值:0.005)、期望未得到满足(17%对13%,p值:0.019)以及会诊后对其全科医生不满意。不满意主要与体格检查(调整后的比值比1.30;95%置信区间:1.06 - 1.60)和全科医生的解释(调整后的比值比1.40;95%置信区间:1.14 - 1.71)有关。探索性分析显示,对检查的不满意与会诊中全科医生认为症状与生物医学疾病无关的评估之间存在关联。这种关联在“仅有症状”的患者和已给出特定诊断的患者中均有发现。
全科医生面临着处理不符合生物医学诊断模式症状的患者的挑战。当前研究表明,与得到诊断的患者相比,这些患者有更多的疾病担忧、期望未得到满足以及对会诊不满意。这种趋势对于会诊结束时被评估为“仅有症状”的所有患者都是如此,而不仅仅是针对少数患有“医学上无法解释的症状”的患者群体。由于初级保健是医疗保健系统的前沿,在几乎三分之一的会诊中,症状被作为主要问题来处理。是时候我们像多年来对生物医学疾病一样,对症状采取同样专业的方法了。