Analysis of referral behaviour: responses to simulated case histories may not reflect real clinical behaviour.
- 1 May 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 40 (334) , 182-5
Abstract
In an attempt to develop a measure of the referral behaviour of general practitioners, 21 simulated case histories were constructed which presented between three and six stages at which a decision was required whether or not refer a 'patient' to hospital. Twenty general practitioners completed the case histories and their responses were compared with their referral rates to outpatient departments. No significant correlations were found between the doctors' responses to the vignettes and their actual referral rates, and the repeatability of the vignettes was disappointing. The fact that the case histories appeared realistic to the doctors who completed them was not reflected in objective measures of their validity. Simulated case histories should not be used as a method of measuring doctors' behaviour without establishing their validity and reliability.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- General practitioner referrals to hospital: the financial implications of variability.1988
- Written Simulation of Patient-Doctor Encounters. 1. Research Instrument for Registration of the Performance of General PractitionersFamily Practice, 1984
- Clinical judgment in rheumatoid arthritis. I. Rheumatologists' opinions and the development of ‘paper patients’.Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, 1983
- JUDGING CURRENT DISEASE-ACTIVITY IN RHEUMATOID-ARTHRITIS - AN INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON1983
- Patient management problems Issues of validityMedical Education, 1982
- Antibiotic use in otitis media: patient simulations as an aid to audit.BMJ, 1981
- A comparison of behaviour on simulated patients and patient management problemsMedical Education, 1981
- Performance on PMPs and performance in practiceAcademic Medicine, 1980
- Further Observations on Diagnosis and Management of General Practice Respiratory Illness using Simulated Patient ConsultationsBMJ, 1974
- Doctors as Decision-makers: A Computer-assisted Study of Diagnosis as a Cognitive SkillBMJ, 1971