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Screening for Psychosocial Problems Among Primary Care Patients: a Pilot Study

Overview
Journal CMAJ
Date 1987 Dec 15
PMID 3676970
Citations 1
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Abstract

The symptoms that a patient presents to the doctor are often not the underlying concern that prompted the consultation. The success of consultations involving a hidden diagnosis depends on how well the patient can express his or her concerns to the doctor and on how skilfully the doctor can encourage this. This study tested the feasibility and acceptability of having patients complete a brief health index questionnaire designed to help them describe their underlying concerns to the doctor. In two family medicine centres 996 patients were asked to complete a questionnaire while waiting to see the doctor; 724 (73%) did so. An evaluation of their responses showed the method to be acceptable to most. The doctors judged that it added valuable information in 41% of all consultations and in 73% of consultations in which the patient presented with psychologic complaints. There was, nevertheless, considerable variation among the physicians in their acceptance of the approach. This variability is discussed in the light of alternative models of how, in practical terms, to treat the psychosocial dimensions of a patient's complaint.

Citing Articles

Establishing a quality improvement process for identification of psychosocial problems in a primary care practice.

Bingham R, Plante D, Bronson D, Tufo H, McKnight K J Gen Intern Med. 1990; 5(4):342-6.

PMID: 2374044 DOI: 10.1007/BF02600403.

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