| Literature DB >> 7895973 |
A M Ward1, P Underwood, B Fatovich, A Wood.
Abstract
Data on the attendances of all patients at three general practices in Western Australia for two 6-month periods 11 months apart were collected as part of a previous study. The present study examined the stability of the attendance patterns of the patients over the two study periods in terms of number of patients, number of visits and diagnoses. The patients who attended in both study periods were classified into four attendance groups: low to low; low to high; high to low; and high to high. The age, sex and diagnoses for each were compared. The results showed that whilst the patient populations remained constant over the two periods, these populations were not comprised of the same patients. Only 45% of those who attended in the first 6 months also attended in the second. Similarly, whilst 8% of patients in each study period were classified as high attenders, only 22% of the high attenders in the first period were also high attenders in the second. The long-term high attenders were older and suffered from chronic diagnoses. The short-term high attenders were found to suffer from more self-limiting diseases and conditions such as depression and pregnancy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1994 PMID: 7895973 DOI: 10.1093/fampra/11.4.431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fam Pract ISSN: 0263-2136 Impact factor: 2.267