| Literature DB >> 3728756 |
K B Wells, C E Lewis, B Leake, M K Schleiter, R H Brook.
Abstract
We compared the practices of subspecialists and general internists in counseling about smoking and exercise, using data from a study of recent graduates of United States training programs in internal medicine. Information on the characteristics of physicians and their clinical practices was obtained from self-report questionnaires. The internists most likely to counsel smokers regardless of the presence or absence of diseases associated with smoking are cardiologists, pulmonary specialists, nephrologists, and generalists trained in a primary care residency funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation or Health Resources Administration. Most internists practice tertiary prevention by counseling a high percentage of smokers with heart or lung disease. Rheumatologists counsel a higher percentage of all patients with poor exercise habits but a lower percentage of such patients with heart disease than do other internists. The differences in counseling related to training are not explained by different levels of involvement as a primary care physician. Rather, these differences appear to reflect training and subspecialty-specific priorities for counseling.Entities:
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Year: 1986 PMID: 3728756 PMCID: PMC1646650 DOI: 10.2105/ajph.76.8.1009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Public Health ISSN: 0090-0036 Impact factor: 9.308