| Literature DB >> 12204096 |
Amy L Mirand1, Gregory P Beehler, Christina L Kuo, Martin C Mahoney.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A practice intervention must have its basis in an understanding of the physician and practice to secure its benefit and relevancy. We used a formative process to characterize primary care physician attitudes, needs, and practice obstacles regarding primary prevention. The characterization will provide the conceptual framework for the development of a practice tool to facilitate routine delivery of primary preventive care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12204096 PMCID: PMC126210 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-2-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Summary of Emergent Themes
| _Three distinct conceptions of prevention: |
| _Traditional model of prevention: primary (avoid disease), secondary (modify disease), and tertiary (ameliorate disease). |
| _Public health model: epidemiological-based prevention practiced largely outside of the clinic realm (e.g., sanitation, vaccination programs). |
| _Wellness model: state of high functioning of mind, body, and spirit across the health/disease spectrum. |
| _Patients typically entered the clinical arena seeking secondary prevention. |
| _The lay media (i.e., television, advertisement, print, Internet) often influenced and distorted patients' perceptions of their risks and health care needs and wants. |
| _Patients were predominantly interested in quick fixes to their health care needs. |
| _Patients expressed "ignorant bliss" (i.e., if they weren't experiencing or knowledgeable about disease symptoms, then their health was not in jeopardy). |
| _Physicians wanted patients to accept more personal responsibility for their own health. |
| _Unwilling patients were difficult to motivate and unlikely to change, regardless of suggested change method. |
| _Physicians' lack of behavioral change training was a significant impediment to promoting patient behavioral change. |