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Variation in practice: a questionnaire survey of how congruence in attitudes between doctors and patients influences referral decisions.
Med Decis Making. 2008 Mar-Apr; 28(2):262-8.MD

Abstract

BACKGROUND

There is a well-known and partly unexplained variation in referral rates among general practitioners (GPs). GPs who are positive toward shared decision making refer less to secondary care, but how congruence in attitudes between doctors and patients influences referral rates has not been investigated. In this study, the authors analyze whether congruence in attitudes between the GP and patients toward shared decision making affects the GP's referral rate.

METHODS

Questionnaire survey was distributed by 56 Norwegian GPs, each to 50 consulting patients. The level of congruence in attitudes toward shared decision making of GPs and corresponding patients was measured by the Patient-Practitioner Orientation Scale. The survey also included self-reported referral rates.

RESULTS

In total, 1268 patients (45%) returned the questionnaires. Respondents were eliminated if they did not fully answer the questionnaire, resulting in a working sample of 835 patients. The authors found that congruence of attitudes toward shared decision making between the GP and patients had a negative effect on referral rate.

CONCLUSION

In this study, congruence of attitudes toward shared decision making between GPs and patients influences referral decisions, indicating that matching attitudes may enhance the effort to solve the medical problem within the GPs' practice (i.e., doctor-patient interaction explains some of the variation in practice). The study supports the policy argument that, if possible, health authorities should enhance the possibilities for patients to choose a GP of matching attitudes.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Stein Rokkan Centre for Social Studies, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway. benedicte.carlsen@rokkan.uib.noNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

18349435

Citation

Carlsen, Benedicte, et al. "Variation in Practice: a Questionnaire Survey of How Congruence in Attitudes Between Doctors and Patients Influences Referral Decisions." Medical Decision Making : an International Journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making, vol. 28, no. 2, 2008, pp. 262-8.
Carlsen B, Aakvik A, Norheim OF. Variation in practice: a questionnaire survey of how congruence in attitudes between doctors and patients influences referral decisions. Med Decis Making. 2008;28(2):262-8.
Carlsen, B., Aakvik, A., & Norheim, O. F. (2008). Variation in practice: a questionnaire survey of how congruence in attitudes between doctors and patients influences referral decisions. Medical Decision Making : an International Journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making, 28(2), 262-8. https://doi.org/10.1177/0272989X07311751
Carlsen B, Aakvik A, Norheim OF. Variation in Practice: a Questionnaire Survey of How Congruence in Attitudes Between Doctors and Patients Influences Referral Decisions. Med Decis Making. 2008 Mar-Apr;28(2):262-8. PubMed PMID: 18349435.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Variation in practice: a questionnaire survey of how congruence in attitudes between doctors and patients influences referral decisions. AU - Carlsen,Benedicte, AU - Aakvik,Arild, AU - Norheim,Ole F, Y1 - 2008/03/18/ PY - 2008/3/20/pubmed PY - 2008/6/11/medline PY - 2008/3/20/entrez SP - 262 EP - 8 JF - Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making JO - Med Decis Making VL - 28 IS - 2 N2 - BACKGROUND: There is a well-known and partly unexplained variation in referral rates among general practitioners (GPs). GPs who are positive toward shared decision making refer less to secondary care, but how congruence in attitudes between doctors and patients influences referral rates has not been investigated. In this study, the authors analyze whether congruence in attitudes between the GP and patients toward shared decision making affects the GP's referral rate. METHODS: Questionnaire survey was distributed by 56 Norwegian GPs, each to 50 consulting patients. The level of congruence in attitudes toward shared decision making of GPs and corresponding patients was measured by the Patient-Practitioner Orientation Scale. The survey also included self-reported referral rates. RESULTS: In total, 1268 patients (45%) returned the questionnaires. Respondents were eliminated if they did not fully answer the questionnaire, resulting in a working sample of 835 patients. The authors found that congruence of attitudes toward shared decision making between the GP and patients had a negative effect on referral rate. CONCLUSION: In this study, congruence of attitudes toward shared decision making between GPs and patients influences referral decisions, indicating that matching attitudes may enhance the effort to solve the medical problem within the GPs' practice (i.e., doctor-patient interaction explains some of the variation in practice). The study supports the policy argument that, if possible, health authorities should enhance the possibilities for patients to choose a GP of matching attitudes. SN - 0272-989X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/18349435/Variation_in_practice:_a_questionnaire_survey_of_how_congruence_in_attitudes_between_doctors_and_patients_influences_referral_decisions_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -