| Literature DB >> 26032949 |
Heike Hansen1, Nadine Pohontsch2, Hendrik van den Bussche3, Martin Scherer4, Ingmar Schäfer5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic conditions are the most common themes in doctor-patient communication, especially for older patients with multimorbidity and their GPs. Former quantitative studies identified a variety of socio-demographic and health-related factors which were associated with the (dis-)agreement between medical records and patient self-reported diseases. The aim of this qualitative study was to identify reasons for disagreement regarding illnesses between patients and their GPs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26032949 PMCID: PMC4450605 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-015-0286-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Prevalence and positive agreement of the 32 diagnosis groups: General practitioner reports vs. patient self-reports from the MultiCare Cohort Study (n = 3.189) [7]
| Diagnosis group | Positive agreementa | Prevalence GP report % (n) | Prevalence patient self-report % (n) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertension | 0.89 | 77.9 (2,483) | 72.3 (2,307) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 0.87 | 37.6 (1,199) | 31.1 (992) |
| Thyroid dysfunction | 0.73 | 33.8 (1,077) | 31.1 (992) |
| Parkinson’s disease | 0.73 | 1.9 (62) | 2.1 (67) |
| Asthma/COPD | 0.70 | 24.2 (771) | 22.0 (700) |
| Lipid metabolism disorders | 0.69 | 58.5 (1,867) | 45.8 (1,460) |
| Chronic ischemic heart disease | 0.68 | 31.4 (1,000) | 30.3 (966) |
| Chronic low back pain | 0.67 | 49.5 (1,577) | 62.2 (1,984) |
| Joint arthrosis | 0.66 | 43.3 (1,382) | 66.5 (2,120) |
| Osteoporosis | 0.65 | 19.8 (632) | 21.6 (690) |
| Cardiac arrhythmias | 0.64 | 26.9 (858) | 33.0 (1,053) |
| Cerebral ischemia/ Chronic stroke | 0.60 | 11.8 (376) | 13.9 (444) |
| Cancers | 0.57 | 18.3 (584) | 10.8 (343) |
| Lower limb varicosis | 0.53 | 23.3 (742) | 36.2 (1,155) |
| Prostatic hyperplasia (n = 1298) | 0.50 | 27.9 (362) | 39.4 (511) |
| Severe vision reduction | 0.47 | 18.9 (604) | 44.0 (1,403) |
| Hyperuricemia/Gout | 0.44 | 17.3 (552) | 16.8 (536) |
| Intestinal diverticulosis | 0.44 | 14.5 (462) | 13.6 (435) |
| Psoriasis | 0.44 | 3.6 (116) | 6.7 (213) |
| Atherosclerosis/PAOD | 0.42 | 16.7 (531) | 11.1 (354) |
| Renal insufficiency | 0.42 | 10.7 (340) | 9.7 (308) |
| Cardiac valve disorders | 0.41 | 9.4 (300) | 9.9 (317) |
| Chronic cholecystitis/ Gallstones | 0.39 | 7.9 (251) | 8.5 (272) |
| Cardiac insufficiency | 0.36 | 13.1 (417) | 17.2 (548) |
| Anemias | 0.36 | 4.3 (136) | 5.3 (170) |
| Neuropathies | 0.35 | 14.7 (469) | 35.6 (1,136) |
| Migraine/chronic headache | 0.34 | 3.5 (113) | 6.1 (196) |
| Rheumatoid arthritis/ Chronic polyarthritis | 0.32 | 4.2 (134) | 12.9 (411) |
| Urinary tract calculi | 0.27 | 1.8 (58) | 3.9 (124) |
| Dizziness | 0.25 | 7.7 (246) | 35.0 (1,115) |
| Hemorrhoids | 0.24 | 7.5 (239) | 22.8 (727) |
| Gynecological problems (n = 1891) | 0.10 | 3.4 (64) | 13.1 (248) |
COPD: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, PAOD: peripheral arterial occlusive disease
aPositive agreement (PA) is calculated with the formula: PA = 2a/(2a + b + c)
Characteristics of the study participants: GPs
| Pseudonym | Age | Gender | Years of practice | Number of patients treated in practice in each quarter | Number of physicians working in practice | Focus group No |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GP1 | 52 | male | 14 | 500 thru 749 patients | 1 | 1 |
| GP2 | 60 | male | 22 | 500 thru 749 patients | 1 | 1 |
| GP3 | 57 | male | 14 | 1,000 and more patients | 2 | 1 |
| GP4 | 57 | female | 15 | 750 thru 999 patients | 2 | 1 |
| GP5 | 65 | female | 24 | 499 thru less patients | 1 | 1 |
| GP6 | 50 | female | 8 | 1,000 and more patients | 1 | 1 |
| GP7 | 52 | female | 12 | 500 thru 749 patients | 3 | 1 |
| GP8 | 61 | male | 28 | 750 thru 999 patients | 3 | 2 |
| GP9 | 42 | male | 9 | 750 thru 999 patients | 2 | 2 |
| GP10 | 55 | female | 16 | 750 thru 999 patients | 2 | 2 |
| GP11 | 47 | female | 8 | 1,000 and more patients | 2 | 3 |
| GP12 | 59 | female | 20 | 1,000 and more patients | 3 | 3 |
| GP13 | 59 | female | 14 | 500 thru 749 patients | 1 | 3 |
| GP14 | 50 | female | 7 | 500 thru 749 patients | 3 | 3 |
| GP15 | 39 | female | 7 | 500 thru 749 patients | 4 | 3 |
Characteristics of the study participants: Patients
| Pseudonym | Age | Gender | Marital status | CASMIN Grade | Focus group No |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | 71 | male | married | 3 | 4 |
| P2 | 80 | male | married | not reported | 4 |
| P3 | 86 | male | widowed | 2 | 4 |
| P4 | 72 | male | married | 2 | 4 |
| P5 | 72 | female | married | 1 | 4 |
| P6 | 76 | female | married | 1 | 4 |
| P7 | 72 | female | divorced | 3 | 4 |
| P8 | 88 | male | married | 1 | 5 |
| P9 | 80 | male | married | 1 | 5 |
| P10 | 72 | male | married | 1 | 5 |
| P11 | 78 | male | married | 3 | 5 |
| P12 | 80 | male | widowed | 3 | 5 |
| P13 | 84 | male | divorced | 2 | 5 |
| P14 | 70 | male | married | 3 | 5 |
| P15 | 72 | female | widowed | 2 | 6 |
| P16 | 72 | female | married | 1 | 6 |
| P17 | 73 | female | widowed | 1 | 6 |
| P18 | 82 | female | married | 3 | 6 |
| P19 | 71 | female | never married | 2 | 6 |
| P20 | 87 | female | widowed | 2 | 6 |
| P21 | 78 | female | widowed | 1 | 6 |
Themes and categories of reasons for disagreement regarding illnesses between older patients with multimorbidity and their GPs
| No | Theme | Perspective | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Category | GP | Patient | |
|
| Problems with communication and cooperation between health care professionals | ||
| The hospital communicates many diagnoses that the general practitioner considered incorrect or exaggerated | × | × | |
| The specialist explains his findings too little and / or responds insufficiently towards the patient | × | × | |
| The GP is not/ or inadequately informed by the specialists, e.g. because no medical report is transferred | × | × | |
| The GP is not involved in the treatment by the specialist | × | × | |
| The patient reluctantly reports being treated by an alternative practitioner | × | ||
|
| Disease management by GP and patient | ||
| The GP’s and patient’s understanding of a disease agree more in diagnoses requiring regular disease management | × | × | |
| The GP’s diagnostic process is more difficult, if the examination of the patient is uncomfortable for the GP or he/she does not feel responsible | × | × | |
| The complexity of a single or multiple diseases complicates the GP’s diagnostic process and the clinical management, as seen for example in multimorbidity | × | × | |
| In patients who take own initiatives, there is a greater consistency in disease understanding between GP and patient | × | ||
|
| Documentation behaviour of the GP | ||
| The pressure from health insurances to encode certain diseases, affects the documentation behaviour of the GP | × | ||
| Whether a disease is diagnosed by the GP or not, depends on the disease stage and measured values | × | × | |
| Not all symptoms are documented by the GP as diseases | × | × | |
| The GP has little knowledge about diseases that are lie far in the patients’ pasts | × | × | |
| Errors in the patient record cannot be corrected subsequently, e.g. in the hospitals’ or GPs’ records | × | × | |
|
| Communication challenges between GP and patient | ||
| There is too little time to discuss complaints and diseases to achieve a mutual understanding | × | × | |
| The GPs’ medical understanding of illnesses must be translated into the patients’ level of understanding and vice versa | × | × | |
| The consultation can be exhausting and this may cause something to be forgotten or missed | × | ||
| The exchange of information and disease management are dependent on the doctor-patient relationship and the mutual trust | × | × | |
| Agreement on understanding a disease is worse in patients who are difficult to lead and / or functionally impaired | × | ||
|
| Differences in the understanding of a disease between GP and patient | ||
| Information that is given by specialists and / or elaborate diagnostics are formative for the patient | × | ||
| The patients’ clinical pictures are influenced by the media and campaigns | × | × | |
| The GPs’ medical understanding of an illness deviates from the patients’ everyday understanding | × | × | |
|
| Prioritization and rating of diseases by GP and patient | ||
| The GP prioritizes diseases that affect the prognosis of the patient | × | ||
| The patient prioritizes diseases associated with complaints | × | ||
| Diseases that are not relevant for the patient from a general practitioner's point of view are not communicated to the patient | × | ||
| Diseases that are not relevant for the GP, from a patient’s perspective, are not communicated to the GP | × | × | |
|
| Obliviousness, repression and avoidance by the patient | ||
| The patient does not remember diseases if they are too far in the past | × | × | |
| Diseases are repressed by the patient, e.g. cancer | × | × | |
| The patient conceals embarrassing diseases | × | × | |
| The patient tries to avoid the utilization of health services | × | × | |
× = Category has been reported by the respective perspective (GP, patient)