Marvel M K, Doherty W J, Baird M A
Department of Family Medicine and Practice, University of Wisconsin.
Fam Med. 1993 May;25(5):337-42.
Physician involvement in patients' psychosocial concerns is seen as desirable by practicing physicians and family medicine educators. Although the effectiveness of several approaches to psychosocial problems has been demonstrated, the skills required of the physician vary widely. We present a five-level developmental model of physician skills in addressing the psychosocial concerns of individual patients.
To validate the model, 171 outpatient office visits in a residency program were videotaped and rated according to the levels. The inter-rater agreement was 88%.
Interviews with lower levels of psychosocial involvement occurred much more frequently than interviews rated at higher levels (48%, 34%, 16%, 2%, 0%, respectively). Involvement at each higher level added approximately two minutes to the length of the visit. The development of higher levels of physician involvement between the first and third year of residency training was not found in this sample.
These results support the validity of the five-level sequence regarding the depth of physician involvement. Because the hierarchy can be used to reliably assess the degree of physician involvement with the psychosocial concerns of individual patients, the model offers potential applications for resident education and further research on the physician-patient relationship.
执业医师和家庭医学教育工作者都认为医师参与患者的心理社会问题是可取的。尽管已经证明了几种解决心理社会问题方法的有效性,但对医师所需技能的要求差异很大。我们提出了一个五级发展模型,用于描述医师处理个体患者心理社会问题的技能。
为验证该模型,对一个住院医师培训项目中的171次门诊就诊进行了录像,并根据这些级别进行评分。评分者间信度为88%。
心理社会参与程度较低的访谈比级别较高的访谈更频繁(分别为48%、34%、16%、2%、0%)。每提高一个级别,就诊时间大约增加两分钟。在这个样本中,未发现住院医师培训第一年到第三年期间医师参与程度更高水平的发展情况。
这些结果支持了关于医师参与深度的五级序列的有效性。由于该层次结构可用于可靠评估医师对个体患者心理社会问题的参与程度,该模型为住院医师教育以及医患关系的进一步研究提供了潜在应用。