GPs' decision-making - perceiving the patient as a person or a disease
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/5640Date
2012Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Background: The aim of this study was to analyse the clinical decision making strategies of GPs with regard to the whole range of problems encountered in everyday work.
Methods: A prospective questionnaire study was carried through, where 16 General practitioners in Sweden registered consecutively 378 problems in 366 patients.
Results: 68.3% of the problems were registered as somatic, 5.8% as psychosocial and 25.9% as both somatic and psychosocial. When the problem was characterised as somatic the main emphasis was most often on the symptoms only, and when the problem was psychosocial main emphasis was given to the person. Immediate, inductive, decision-making contrary to gradual, analytical, was used for about half of the problems. Immediate
decision-making was less often used when problems were registered as both somatic and psychosocial and focus was on both the symptoms and the person. When immediate decision-making was used the GPs were significantly more often certain of their identification of the problem and significantly more satisfied with their consultation.
Rules of thumb in consultations registered as somatic with emphasis on symptoms only did not include any
reference to the individual patient. In consultations registered as psychosocial with emphasis on the person, rules of
thumb often included reference to the patient as a known person.
Conclusions: The decision-making (immediate or gradual) registered by the GPs seemed to have been adjusted on
the symptom or on the patient as a person. Our results indicate that the GPs seem to recognise immediately both
problems and persons, hence the quintessence of the expert skill of the GP as developed through experience.
Publisher
BioMed CentralCitation
BMC Family Practice (2012), vol. 13:38Metadata
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