Psychosocial and illness related predictors of consultation rates in primary care - a cohort study
Psychosocial and illness related predictors of consultation rates in primary care - a cohort study
Background: despite extensive research, the reasons why patients consult their doctors are unclear. The aim of the current study was to identify the psychosocial and illness related factors that independently predicted primary care consultation over a 5-year period.
Method: we carried out a prospective, population-based cohort study with three waves of data collection by postal questionnaire in one general practice in Greater Manchester (UK). Consultation data were sought from primary care records on a random subsample of 800 adult patients. The main outcome measure was the number of consultations (including surgery and home visits) over the 5 years of the study as determined by raters blind to questionnaire responses. Questionnaire measures included the 12-item version of the General Health Questionnaire, the Illness Attitude Scales, a somatic symptom scale, a fatigue scale, a functional assessment of disability.
Results: consultation data were obtained on 738 patients (92% of selected subjects), who accounted for 12182 consultations. Negative illness attitudes, the presence of physical and psychiatric disorder, health anxiety, changes in psychological distress, reported physical symptoms and demographic factors such as age and sex were independently associated with consultation over a 5-year period. These variables together accounted for a difference of ten consultations per year between groups.
Conclusion: consultation in primary care is a complex behaviour with a complex aetiology. Terms such as ‘frequent attenders’ may be less helpful than recognizing a number of dimensions that operate across the whole spectrum of consultation frequency. Future research should consider the wider context of consultation.
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Kapur, N.
f713a6d9-5625-4492-81fb-75801b6cb12a
Hunt, I.
bcc66767-5860-4e22-9a21-ce72ce35b6b4
Lunt, M.
c2b3288c-62f9-4a6c-aca5-ad0c1cc76ce5
McBeth, J.
98012716-66ba-480b-9e43-ac53b51dce61
Creed, F.
9df34f9e-5bf4-411f-8eed-b12dbc2d395c
Macfarlane, G.
dafa2d7d-c3c2-4c41-8fe7-e8d8de0ee3e7
21 April 2004
Kapur, N.
f713a6d9-5625-4492-81fb-75801b6cb12a
Hunt, I.
bcc66767-5860-4e22-9a21-ce72ce35b6b4
Lunt, M.
c2b3288c-62f9-4a6c-aca5-ad0c1cc76ce5
McBeth, J.
98012716-66ba-480b-9e43-ac53b51dce61
Creed, F.
9df34f9e-5bf4-411f-8eed-b12dbc2d395c
Macfarlane, G.
dafa2d7d-c3c2-4c41-8fe7-e8d8de0ee3e7
Kapur, N., Hunt, I., Lunt, M., McBeth, J., Creed, F. and Macfarlane, G.
(2004)
Psychosocial and illness related predictors of consultation rates in primary care - a cohort study.
Psychological Medicine, 34 (4), .
(doi:10.1017/S0033291703001223).
Abstract
Background: despite extensive research, the reasons why patients consult their doctors are unclear. The aim of the current study was to identify the psychosocial and illness related factors that independently predicted primary care consultation over a 5-year period.
Method: we carried out a prospective, population-based cohort study with three waves of data collection by postal questionnaire in one general practice in Greater Manchester (UK). Consultation data were sought from primary care records on a random subsample of 800 adult patients. The main outcome measure was the number of consultations (including surgery and home visits) over the 5 years of the study as determined by raters blind to questionnaire responses. Questionnaire measures included the 12-item version of the General Health Questionnaire, the Illness Attitude Scales, a somatic symptom scale, a fatigue scale, a functional assessment of disability.
Results: consultation data were obtained on 738 patients (92% of selected subjects), who accounted for 12182 consultations. Negative illness attitudes, the presence of physical and psychiatric disorder, health anxiety, changes in psychological distress, reported physical symptoms and demographic factors such as age and sex were independently associated with consultation over a 5-year period. These variables together accounted for a difference of ten consultations per year between groups.
Conclusion: consultation in primary care is a complex behaviour with a complex aetiology. Terms such as ‘frequent attenders’ may be less helpful than recognizing a number of dimensions that operate across the whole spectrum of consultation frequency. Future research should consider the wider context of consultation.
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Published date: 21 April 2004
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Local EPrints ID: 491608
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491608
ISSN: 0033-2917
PURE UUID: 427beaeb-dfc5-42a2-aa1f-aa44ae89dd13
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Date deposited: 27 Jun 2024 16:59
Last modified: 28 Jun 2024 02:09
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Author:
N. Kapur
Author:
I. Hunt
Author:
M. Lunt
Author:
J. McBeth
Author:
F. Creed
Author:
G. Macfarlane
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