Literature DB >> 10448717

Health habit counseling amidst competing demands: effects of patient health habits and visit characteristics.

B A Chernof1, S E Sherman, A B Lanto, M L Lee, E M Yano, L V Rubenstein.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study assesses the effects of competing demands, such as poor health habits or new medical problems, on health-habit counseling during a primary care visit.
METHODS: We surveyed a consecutive sample of 1,259 patients visiting primary care clinicians at an academic VA medical center. Before the visit, patients reported their health status, health habits, and sociodemographics; immediately after the visit, patients reported reasons for the visit and whether they had been counseled about specific health habits. We scored visit acuity ranging from visits for unscheduled walk-in care or new medical problems to scheduled visits for check-ups or old problems. We defined counseling "triggers" as clinical indications for counseling about particular health habits (e.g., smoking). We developed a logistic model predicting primary care provider counseling during a visit.
RESULTS: Over two-thirds of patients (68.9%) received some health habit counseling. Controlling for other independent variables, patients with more triggers were more likely to report being counseled. Counseling rates went up as visit acuity went down; patients with the lowest visit acuity having 67% greater odds of being counseled than patients with the highest visit acuity.
CONCLUSIONS: Physicians set priorities for health-habit counseling during a visit based on patients' health habit problems or triggers; whether the visit is scheduled or walk-in; and whether the patient has new or acute problems. Future research about primary care performance of health habit counseling should account for these patient and visit characteristics, and prevention-oriented health care organizations should ensure access to scheduled "check-up" visits.

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Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10448717     DOI: 10.1097/00005650-199908000-00004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Care        ISSN: 0025-7079            Impact factor:   2.983


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