Taylor R B, Burdette J A, Camp L, Edwards J
J Fam Pract. 1980 Mar;10(3):495-500.
This study concerned two questions: Why does the patient come to the physician? And, how does patient-physician agreement as to the primary purpose affect the process and outcome of the medical encounter? Separate interviews of patients and physicians following 200 medical encounters revealed a preponderance of visits for continuing care, a paucity of visits for social and emotional problems, and a number of visits in which "concern" as the patient's primary purpose was misperceived by the physician. There was no statistically significant relationship when agreement (or lack of agreement) between patient and physician as to the purpose of the encounter was compared with patient age and sex, number of previous visits of the patient to the physician, and subsequent patient-physician agreement as to the diagnosis, prognosis, therapy, and satisfaction. There was also no statistically significant relationship when patient-physician concordance as to visit purpose was compared with education level of the patient or with physician perception of the patient's intended compliance. In both concordance and non-concordance groups, physicians underestimated both patient satisfaction with the encounters and intended compliance.
患者为何来看医生?以及患者与医生就主要目的达成的共识如何影响医疗问诊的过程和结果?对200次医疗问诊后的患者和医生分别进行访谈发现,持续护理就诊占多数,社会和情感问题就诊较少,还有一些就诊中,医生误解了患者以“担忧”作为主要目的。当比较患者与医生就问诊目的达成的共识(或未达成共识)与患者年龄、性别、患者之前看医生的次数,以及随后患者与医生就诊断、预后、治疗和满意度达成的共识时,未发现具有统计学意义的关系。当比较患者与医生就就诊目的的一致性与患者教育水平或医生对患者预期依从性的认知时,也未发现具有统计学意义的关系。在一致性和非一致性组中,医生都低估了患者对问诊的满意度和预期依从性。