‘Difficult’ patients ‘more likely to report worse symptoms’
January 27th, 2011 - 2:07 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Jan 27 (ANI): A new study has shown that ‘difficult’ patient-clinician encounters have a negative impact on patients’ health outcomes in the short-term.
Sheri Hinchey from the Tripler Army Medical Centre in Honolulu and Jeffrey Jackson from the Zablocki VA Medical Centre in Milwaukee carried the study.
A total of 750 adults who attended a primary care walk-in clinic took part. Before the consultation, the authors assessed their symptoms, expectations, general health, how they functioned physically, socially and emotionally as well as whether these adults had mental disorders.
Immediately after their visit, participants were asked about their satisfaction with the encounter, any unmet expectations as well as their levels of trust in their doctor. Two weeks later, symptoms were checked again. In addition, clinicians were asked to rate how difficult the encounter was after each visit.
The authors found that nearly 18 percent of patients were perceived as ‘difficult’. Both patient and physician characteristics contributed to ‘difficult’ encounters. In particular, ‘difficult’ patients had more symptoms, worse functional status, used the clinic more frequently and were more likely to have an underlying psychiatric disorder than non-difficult patients.
Clinicians with a more open communication style and those with more experience reported fewer difficult encounters.
As a result, patients emerging from difficult encounters were less satisfied, had lower trust in their clinician and a greater number of unmet expectations. Two weeks later, they were also more likely to experience worsening of their symptoms.
The study has been published online in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. (ANI)
- Does psychotherapy induce changes in the brain? - Feb 15, 2011
- Elderly people with clinical depression more prone to knee arthritis - Mar 17, 2011
- Psychotic-like symptoms linked to poor outcomes in depression patients - Dec 07, 2010
- Common anxiety disorders make it tougher to kick the butt - Oct 26, 2010
- Anxiety disorder common in people with Tourette syndrome - Jun 18, 2010
- Benefit of antidepressants vary with severity of depression symptoms - Jan 06, 2010
- New scale to measure anxiety outcomes - Mar 10, 2010
- Anti-depressants help but may rob you of sleep - Apr 21, 2011
- Just four out of ten patients know they have genital herpes - Apr 12, 2011
- Sexual abuse survivors prone to psychiatric disorders - Jul 13, 2010
- Medication common practice for insomnia in kids - Jul 27, 2010
- Four novel biomarkers that may help diagnose asthma, COPD identified - Mar 12, 2011
- Antidepressants 'do not cure all depression symptoms completely' - Apr 22, 2011
- Partners of breast cancer patients at high risk of developing mood disorders - Sep 27, 2010
- Fibromyalgia linked to restless legs syndrome - Oct 16, 2010
Tags: clinicians, communication style, difficult patient, difficult patients, functional status, general health, general internal medicine, health outcomes, hinchey, jeffrey jackson, journal of general internal medicine, medical centre, mental disorders, negative impact, open communication, psychiatric disorder, tripler army medical, unmet expectations, walk in clinic, zablocki