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Patient-provider concordance in the prioritization of health conditions among hypertensive diabetes patients.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Many patients with diabetes have multiple other chronic conditions, but little is known about whether these patients and their primary care providers agree on the relative importance that they assign these comorbidities.
OBJECTIVE
To understand patterns of patient-provider concordance in the prioritization of health conditions in patients with multimorbidity.
DESIGN
Prospective cohort study of 92 primary care providers and 1,169 of their diabetic patients with elevated clinic triage blood pressure (> or = 140/90) at nine Midwest VA facilities.
MEASUREMENTS
We constructed a patient-provider concordance score based on responses to surveys in which patients were asked to rank their most important health concerns and their providers were asked to rank the most important conditions likely to affect that patient's health outcomes. We then calculated the change in predicted probability of concordance when the patient reported having poor health status, pain or depression, or competing demands (issues that were more pressing than his health), controlling for both patient and provider characteristics.
RESULTS
For 714 pairs (72%), providers ranked the patient's most important concern in their list of three conditions. Both patients and providers ranked diabetes and hypertension most frequently; however, providers were more likely to rank hypertension as most important (38% vs. 18%). Patients were more likely than providers to prioritize symptomatic conditions such as pain, depression, and breathing problems. The predicted probability of patient-provider concordance decreased when a patient reported having poor health status (55% vs. 64%, p < 0.01) or non-health competing demands (46% vs. 62%, p < 0.01).
CONCLUSIONS
Patients and their primary care providers often agreed on the most important health conditions affecting patients with multimorbidity, but this concordance was lower for patients with poor health status or non-health competing demands. Interventions that increase provider awareness about symptomatic concerns and competing demands may improve chronic disease management in these vulnerable patients.

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  • Authors

    Zulman DM, Kerr EA, Hofer TP, Heisler M, Zikmund-Fisher BJ

    Institution

    Department of Veterans Affairs, Health Services Research and Development Center of Excellence, Ann Arbor, MI, USA. dzulman@umich.edu

    Source

    Journal of general internal medicine 25:5 2010 May pg 408-14

    MeSH

    Aged
    Cohort Studies
    Diabetes Complications
    Female
    Health Priorities
    Humans
    Hypertension
    Male
    Middle Aged
    Patient Participation
    Patient Satisfaction
    Physician-Patient Relations
    Physicians, Primary Care
    Prospective Studies

    Pub Type(s)

    Comparative Study
    Journal Article
    Multicenter Study
    Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

    Language

    eng

    PubMed ID

    20127197