Do patients with unexplained physical symptoms pressurise general practitioners for somatic treatment? A qualitative study
Open Access
- 31 March 2004
- Vol. 328 (7447) , 1057
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.38057.622639.ee
Abstract
Objectives To identify the ways in which patients with medically unexplained symptoms present their problems and needs to general practitioners and to identify the forms of presentation that might lead general practitioners to feel pressurised to deliver somatic interventions. Design Qualitative analysis of audiorecorded consultations between patients and general practitioners. Setting 7 general practices in Merseyside, England. Participants 36 patients selected consecutively from 21 general practices, in whom doctors considered that patients' symptoms were medically unexplained. Main outcome measures Inductive qualitative analysis of ways in which patients presented their symptoms to general practitioners. Results Although 34 patients received somatic interventions (27 received drug prescriptions, 12 underwent investigations, and four were referred), only 10 requested them. However, patients presented in other ways that had the potential to pressurise general practitioners, including: graphic and emotional language; complex patterns of symptoms that resisted explanation; description of emotional and social effects of symptoms; reference to other individuals as authority for the severity of symptoms; and biomedical explanations. Conclusions Most patients with unexplained symptoms received somatic interventions from their general practitioners but had not requested them. Though such patients apparently seek to engage the general practitioner by conveying the reality of their suffering, general practitioners respond symptomatically.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Listening to patients with unexplained menstrual symptoms: what do they tell the gynaecologist?BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 2002
- A Primary Care Perspective on Prevailing Assumptions about Persistent Medically Unexplained Physical SymptomsThe International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine, 2002
- Medically unexplained symptoms and the problem of power in the primary care consultation: a qualitative studyFamily Practice, 2002
- The difficult patient' as perceived by family physiciansFamily Practice, 2001
- Medically unexplained symptoms--GPs' attitudes towards their cause and managementFamily Practice, 2001
- The Othmer and DeSouza test for screening of somatisation disorder: is it useful in general practice?2001
- Surgery in the absence of pathology The relationship of patients' presentation to gynecologists' decisions for hysterectomyJournal of Psychosomatic Research, 2000
- Unexplained symptoms in primary care: perspectives of doctors and patientsGeneral Hospital Psychiatry, 2000
- Clinical and patient satisfaction outcomes of a new treatment for somatized mental disorder taught to general practitioners.1999
- Doctors' perceptions of pressure from patients for referral.BMJ, 1991