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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 2/2015

01-02-2015 | Original Research

Impact of Patient Requests on Provider-Perceived Visit Difficulty in Primary Care

Authors: Joshua J. Fenton, MD, MPH, Peter Franks, MD, Mitchell D. Feldman, MD, MPhil, Anthony Jerant, MD, Stephen G. Henry, MD, Debora A. Paterniti, PhD, Richard L. Kravitz, MD, MSPH

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 2/2015

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ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND

“Difficult visits” are common in primary care and may contribute to primary care provider (PCP) career dissatisfaction and burnout. Patient requests occur in approximately half of primary care visits and may be a source of clinician–patient miscommunication or conflict, contributing to perceived visit difficulty.

OBJECTIVE

We aimed to determine associations between types of patient requests and PCP-perceived visit difficulty.

DESIGN

This was an observational study, nested in a multicenter randomized trial of depression engagement interventions.

SUBJECTS

We included 824 patient visits within 135 PCP practices in Northern California occurring from June 2010 to March 2012.

MAIN MEASURES

PCP-perceived visit difficulty was quantified using a three-item scale (relative visit difficulty, amount of effort required, and amount of time required; Cronbach’s α = 0.81). Using linear regression, the difficulty scale (score range 0–2 from least to most difficult) was modeled as a function of: patient requests for diagnostics tests, pain medications, and specialist referrals; PCP perception of likely depression or likely substance abuse; patient sociodemographics, comorbidity, depression; PCP characteristics and practice setting.

RESULTS

Patients requested diagnostic tests, pain medications, and specialist referrals in 37.2, 20.0 and 30.0 % of visits, respectively. After adjustment for patient medical and psychiatric complexity, perceived difficulty was significantly higher when patients requested diagnostic tests [parameter estimate (PE) 0.11, (95 % CI: 0.03, 0.20)] but not when patients requested pain medications [PE −0.04 (95 % CI: −0.15, 0.08)] or referrals [PE 0.04 (95 % CI: −0.07, 0.25)].

CONCLUSIONS

PCP-perceived visit difficulty is associated with patient requests for diagnostic tests, but not requests for pain medications or specialist referrals. In this era of “choosing wisely,” PCPs may be challenged to respond to diagnostic test requests in an evidence-based manner, while maintaining the provider–patient relationship and PCP career satisfaction.
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Metadata
Title
Impact of Patient Requests on Provider-Perceived Visit Difficulty in Primary Care
Authors
Joshua J. Fenton, MD, MPH
Peter Franks, MD
Mitchell D. Feldman, MD, MPhil
Anthony Jerant, MD
Stephen G. Henry, MD
Debora A. Paterniti, PhD
Richard L. Kravitz, MD, MSPH
Publication date
01-02-2015
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 2/2015
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-014-3082-8

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