Department of General Practice, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, 553 St Kilda Road, Melbourne, 3000, Australia.
General Practice Clinical Unit, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
BMC Prim Care. 2024 Sep 16;25(1):340. doi: 10.1186/s12875-024-02592-1.
When doctors seek medical care, there is evidence that the treating doctor can struggle to provide optimal treatment. Guidelines state that doctor-patients should be treated like any other patient, but this is challenging for the treating doctor. This study set out to explore both the positive experiences general practitioners (GPs) have when caring for doctor-patients, and the challenges they confront. It sought to identify whether GPs believe they treat doctor-patients differently to other patients and if so, in what ways, for what reasons, and how this impacts their provision of care. The study also aimed to develop a model that makes sense of GPs' experiences when caring for a patient who is also a medical doctor.
Qualitative in-depth interviews with 26 GPs were carried out, with analysis of de-identified transcripts using pragmatic grounded theory. Evolving understandings were used to develop a model to make sense of GPs' experiences caring for their doctor-patients.
The core aspects of GPs' experiences of treating fellow doctors centred around concepts of respect and collegiality. These play a central role in mediating how a treating doctor experiences a consultation with a doctor-patient, influencing the quality of care provided. GPs shared that the use of medical language (and assumptions about the doctor-patient's knowledge/behaviours), testing, the exploration of sensitive issues, and the degree of shared decision-making were areas where their treatment might vary when treating a doctor-patient. Treating doctors often experience anxiety about errors and the likely scrutiny from the medical, and wider community. The decision to treat the doctor-patient differently was driven by a desire to maintain a sense of collegiality, to not offend, to meet their doctor-patient's expectations, and to appear competent.
The professional socialisation of doctors, with its emphasis on collegiality and respect, plays a significant role in the dynamics of the therapeutic relationship when a doctor treats a doctor-patient. Current guidelines make little reference to these dynamics with the over-simplified 'keep it normal' recommendations. Treating doctors need evidence-informed training to navigate these challenges and ensure they can effectively deliver quality care to their doctor-patients.
当医生寻求医疗保健时,有证据表明治疗医生可能难以提供最佳治疗。指南规定医生-患者应像对待其他患者一样对待,但这对治疗医生来说具有挑战性。本研究旨在探讨全科医生在照顾医生患者时的积极体验,以及他们面临的挑战。它试图确定全科医生是否认为他们对医生患者的治疗与对其他患者的治疗不同,如果是,以何种方式、出于何种原因以及这如何影响他们的护理提供。该研究还旨在开发一种模型,以理解全科医生在照顾既是医生又是患者的患者时的体验。
对 26 名全科医生进行了定性深入访谈,并使用实用扎根理论对匿名转录本进行了分析。不断发展的理解被用于开发一种模型,以理解全科医生照顾他们的医生患者的经验。
全科医生治疗同事医生的经验的核心方面围绕着尊重和协作的概念。这些在调节治疗医生如何体验与医生患者的咨询方面发挥着核心作用,影响着提供的护理质量。全科医生分享说,使用医学语言(以及对医生患者的知识/行为的假设)、测试、探索敏感问题以及共享决策的程度是他们在治疗医生患者时可能有所不同的治疗领域。治疗医生经常对错误和可能来自医学和更广泛社区的审查感到焦虑。决定对医生患者进行不同的治疗是为了保持协作感、不冒犯、满足他们的医生患者的期望并表现出能力。
医生的专业社会化,强调协作和尊重,在医生治疗医生患者时的治疗关系动态中起着重要作用。当前的指南几乎没有参考这些动态,只是简单地建议“保持正常”。治疗医生需要循证培训来应对这些挑战,确保他们能够有效地为他们的医生患者提供优质护理。