| Literature DB >> 29047331 |
Anthony Dowell1, Caroline Morris2, Lindsay Macdonald1, Maria Stubbe1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gout is the most common form of inflammatory arthritis and is associated with considerable co-morbidity. It is usually managed in the primary care setting with a combination of lifestyle modification and pharmacological therapy. This study describes patterns of communication about gout observed in interactions between patients and primary care practitioners during routine consultations.Entities:
Keywords: Communication; Consultation; General practice; Gout; Primary health care; Qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29047331 PMCID: PMC5648494 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-017-0662-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Background information about the ARCH Corpus database [27]
| This Corpus houses a digitally stored collection of patient / practitioner consultation data that includes video-recorded consultations and verbatim transcripts. |
| Included data has been collected since 2003 as part of funded studies. |
| These studies include the: |
| - Interaction Study (IS) exploring clinical decision-making when rationing is explicit; |
| - Tracking Study (TS) exploring communication processes throughout a single complete episode of care of patients referred from primary to secondary care; |
| - Diabetes Study (DS) tracking the contact of newly diagnosed patients with Type 2 diabetes with healthcare professionals over a six-month period. |
| The combined dataset for the IS and TS comprised an unselected sample of 183 routine consultations involving 15 general practitioners recorded in 21 participating general practices in the Wellington region of New Zealand between 2004 and 2007. The data for the DS was purposively collected in Wellington and Auckland; for this study, 36 patients newly diagnosed with type 2 diabetes were recruited prospectively via 21 general practices (6 of which had participated in the previous studies) and tracked for a period of 6 months between 2008 and 2011. Their consultations with general practitioners and nurses at the general practice and related consultations with allied health professional staff were video-recorded. |
| All consultations were made in the course of ‘practice as usual’ and are therefore typical of routine interactions occurring in New Zealand healthcare. |
| Written consent was sought from participants in these original studies to use their data for secondary analysis. |
| At the time of sampling the ARCH Corpus included 418 video-recorded consultations recorded between 2003 and 2011, 337 of which were eligible for inclusion. These comprised 247 individual patients, 30 general practitioners, 31 nurses and 15 other practitioners. |
Demographic characteristics of patients and practitioners involved in the gout consultations (n = 31)
|
| |
| • 18 individual patients | |
| - Male | |
| - Age: mean 54 years; median 52 years | |
| - Age range: 36 to 67 years | |
|
| |
| • 17 individual practitioners | |
| - General practitioners | |
| - Nurses | |
| - Podiatrists | |
| - Dietitian |
Data analysis process
| 1. CM identified and coded conversation sequences related to gout in the transcripts. CM then reviewed the video-recordings to confirm and enrich the analysis. A note was made of any important contextual non-verbal communication from either party e.g. nodding of the head, smiling, sighing, listening attentively, examining the patient, turning away from the patient. |
| 2. Initial coding included: |
| - how gout was introduced into a consultation and by whom |
| - the location within the consultation |
| - the importance of the condition from the patient perspective |
| - diagnosis and treatment of the condition |
| - emphasis placed on biochemical test results and dietary and lifestyle advice |
| 3. Themes and sub-themes were identified from the data. Initial interpretations of the clinical relevance and importance of the themes derived were debated and discussed between CM, a pharmacist and experienced qualitative researcher, and AD, the general practitioner member of the project team. |
| 4. LM and MS, researchers with experience in linguistics, contributed to a second round of discussion and interpretation. Examples of refinements at this point include: |
| - “Gout as an incidental part of the consultation” and “Impact of gout for patients” being combined as sub-themes of the over-arching theme “The importance of gout” |
| - A linguistic interpretative viewpoint to the differences observed around lifestyle and medicines |
| - Acknowledgement of the importance and possible ambiguity of ‘semi-verbal’ communication (e.g. the use of “mm” by participants) |
| 5. Disagreements were resolved by consensus. |
| 6. All authors reviewed and agreed the final themes and interpretation |
Themes derived from the data
| Themes that are the focus of this paper | |
| • The importance of gout | |
| - Gout as an ‘incidental’ part of the consultation | |
| - The impact of gout on patients | |
| • ‘Telling’ versus ‘listening’ in consultations | |
| Medicine-related themesa | |
| • Level of patient knowledge | |
| • Patient attitudes to medicines | |
| • Attributes of practitioner communication | |
| - Delivery and content of information provided | |
| - Taking the opportunities presented | |
| Other themes | |
| • Patient interpretation of symptoms | |
| • Patient understanding of gout management | |
| • Patient understanding of uric acid levels |
aDescribed in detail elsewhere [40]
Contextual information about 18 individual patient’s gout consultations (n = 31)
| Consultation Identifier* | Patient age (years) | Practitioner | Incidental or presenting complaint (PC) | Initiator of gout conversation | Point of consultation gout first mentioned | Discussion length; context | Gout medicines mentioned | Lifestyle advice/diet mentioned | Uric acid levels mentioned |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DS-GP01–04 | 41–50 | GP | Incidental | Patient | Early | Short; no current symptoms | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| DS-NS10–01 | 41–50 | Nurse | Incidental | Practitioner | Late | In passing# | No | Yes | Yes |
| DS-NS14-02a | 51–60 | Nurse | Incidental | Practitioner | Late | In passing# | No | Yes | No |
| DS-GP19-02b | 51–60 | GP | Incidental | Patient | Start | Substantive; no current symptoms | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| DS-NS14-02b | 51–60 | Nurse | Incidental | Patient | Start | Short; No current symptoms | Yes | Yes | No |
| DS-GP29–01 | 41–50 | GP | Incidental | Patient | Start | Substantive; acute flare, new diagnosis | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| DS-NS13-01a | 31–40 | Nurse | Incidental | Patient | Middle | Short; patient thought they had gout | No | Yes | Yes |
| DS-NS13-01b | 31–40 | Nurse | Incidental | Practitioner | Early | Short; following up discussion of previous visit where patient thought they had gout | Yes | No | No |
| DS-GP18–01 | 31–40 | GP | Incidental | Practitioner | Middle | Substantive; discussion of preventive therapy | Yes | No | No |
| DS-HP06-01a | 31–40 | Dietitian | Incidental | Patient | Start | Short; struggling with gout | Yes | Yes | No |
| DS-HP07-01a | 31–40 | Podiatrist | Incidental | Patient | Start | Substantive; no current symptoms | Yes | Yes | No |
| DS-NS13-01c_GP18 | 31–40 | Nurse & GP | Incidental | Patient | Start | Substantive; acute flare | Yes | No | No |
| DS-HP06-01b | 31–40 | Dietitian | Incidental | Practitioner | Start | Substantive; acute flare | Yes | Yes | No |
| DS-HP07-01b | 31–40 | Podiatrist | Incidental | Practitioner | Start | Substantive; no current symptoms | Yes | No | No |
| DS-NS13-01d_GP18 | 31–40 | Nurse & GP | Incidental | Patient | Early | Substantive; acute flare subsiding | Yes | No | Yes |
| DS-NS13-04d_GP21 | 61–70 | Nurse & GP | Incidental | Patient | Start | Short; mention of recent flare | No | No | Yes |
| DS-NS25–01 | 51–60 | Nurse | Incidental | Practitioner | Early | In passing# | Yes | No | No |
| DS-NS27–02 | 41–50 | Nurse | Incidental | Practitioner | Close | In passing# | Yes | No | Yes |
| DS-HP10-02a | 41–50 | Podiatrist | Incidental | Patient | Middle | Short; making conversation | Yes | No | No |
| DS-HP10-02b | 41–50 | Podiatrist | Incidental | Patient | Middle | Short; making conversation | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| IS-GP02–03 | 41–50 | GP | Incidental | Practitioner | Start | Substantive; no current symptoms | Yes | No | No |
| IS-GP02–14 | 41–50 | GP | PC | Patient | Start | Substantive; acute flare, pre-existing diagnosis | Yes | No | Yes |
| IS-GP03–06 | 61–70 | GP | Incidental | Practitioner | Late | In passing# | Yes | No | Yes |
| IS-GP07–05 | 61–70 | GP | Incidental | Practitioner | Start | In passing# | Yes | No | No |
| IS-GP07–06 | 41–50 | GP | Incidental | Practitioner | Middle | In passing# | Yes | No | No |
| TS-GP03–08 | 51–60 | GP | Incidental | Practitioner | Middle | In passing# | Yes | No | No |
| TS-GP03–12 | 61–70 | GP | Incidental | Practitioner | Start | In passing# | Yes | No | No |
| TS-GP03–17 | 61–70 | GP | Incidental | Practitioner | Middle | Short; gout considered before being eliminated | Yes | No | No |
| TS-GP08–10 | 51–60 | GP | Incidental | Practitioner | Early | In passing# | Yes | No | Yes |
| TS-GP09–05 | 41–50 | GP | PC | Patient | Start | Substantive; acute flare, pre-existing diagnosis | Yes | Yes | No |
| TS-GP14–04 | 61–70 | GP | Incidental | Practitioner | Middle | Substantive; no current symptoms | Yes | No | No |
GP General practitioner
*Consultations prefixed by DS were part of the Diabetes Study, IS the Interaction Study and TS the Tracking Study; a brief description of each study is shown in Table 1
#In the context of general patient review / medicines and/or blood test review