What Do GPs Actually Know About Their Patients As Persons?
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/8493Dato
2013-09-29Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Background and Aims: Life experience and existential circumstances have an impact on health. Within medicine,
however, the significance to patient care of person-related, biographical knowledge receives only rudimentary emphasis and
its substantial theoretical underpinnings are inadequately understood and infrequently applied. This study explores the types
and extent of some Norwegian general practitioners’ (GPs’) person-related knowledge, exemplified by patients on the GPs
respective lists who are currently in a state of frail health.
Methods: Nine GPs were interviewed regarding one of their patients who had recently been admitted to the rehabilitation
unit of a nursing home. Subsequent interviews with the individual patients served both to validate the GPs’ information and
as a starting point for further inquiry into patient life stories. Interview transcripts were analyzed within a
phenomenological-hermeneutical framework.
Results: Most GPs were able adequately to characterize the personality of their patients and had acquired substantial
knowledge about their occupation and closest family relationships. The GPs tended to have less knowledge regarding
patients’ interests, hobbies, social network and their relationships to their parents and siblings. They had the least knowledge
about patients’ childhood, upbringing and social background. Some GPs reacted with surprise or embarrassment when
becoming aware of potentially significant “knowledge holes” regarding patients whom they had known for years.
Conclusions and implications: We document limitations to healthcare professionals’ eliciting of knowledge about their
patients as persons. A long-term doctor-patient relationship seems to enable GPs to identify and articulate their patients’
personal characteristics. It does not ensure that the GPs will accumulate knowledge regarding those biographical facts or
experiences that, particularly during transitions to other caretakers, might prove most salient to their patients’ health and
treatment. We believe the findings to have relevance both for clinical practice and medical education, but further research
and reflection is needed before formal changes in current practice are to be recommended.
Forlag
The European Society for Person Centered HealthcareSitering
European Journal for Person Centered Healthcare 1(2013) s. 149-160Metadata
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