Patients' expectations and intention to self-medicate.
- 1 August 1979
- journal article
- Vol. 29 (205) , 468-72
Abstract
I studied patients' expectations of receiving a prescription after a consultation with their general practitioner and their intention to buy a remedy from the chemist after leaving the surgery.Of a group of 368 patients, 56 per cent expected to receive a prescription and 24 per cent intended to self-medicate. A striking variation was found among patients attending each of the five doctors participating in the study. Patient expectation closely agreed with the prescribing rate per partner. No consistent relationship was found between a low prescribing rate and high self-medication rates. I suggest that by reducing prescribing and encouraging patients to be self-reliant in the management of minor ailments, it might be possible to reduce a general practitioner's workload and the amount of money spent on prescribing in general practice.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- "Curing" minor illness in general practice.BMJ, 1977
- Doctors' anxieties in prescribing.1977
- Doctor-patient interaction and some problems for prescribing.1976
- Measuring the results of changes in the method of delivering primary medical care-a cautionary tale.1974
- Goals and trends in the unionization of health professionals.1972