What makes a good general practitioner: do patients and doctors have different views?
- 1 December 1997
- journal article
- Vol. 47 (425) , 805-9
Abstract
General practitioners (GPs) are expected to be responsive to patients' expectations, but patients and doctors may have different views on what constitutes good general practice care. To elicit areas of controversy as well as areas of mutual agreement between the opinions of patients and GPs with regard to good general practice care. A questionnaire, distributed to 850 patients and 400 GPs, measured which of 40 aspects of general practice care were given priority. A second questionnaire, distributed to 400 different GPs, measured the GPs' perception of the priorities of patients. The priority rank order of all 40 aspects was highly correlated for patients and GPs (0.72), as was the rank order of aspects for patients and the perception of them by GPs (0.71). Nevertheless, when comparing the priorities of patients and GPs, 23 out of 40 aspects differed significantly (P = 0.00125) in their rank number. Similarly, when comparing the priorities of patients with the perception of them by GPs, 23 aspects differed significantly. There is great similarity between the priorities of patients and those of GPs. GPs are quite capable of assessing most of the priorities of patients. However, potentially controversial areas of general practice care do exist.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Indicators of the quality of general practice care of patients with chronic illness: a step towards the real involvement of patients in the assessment of the quality of care.Quality and Safety in Health Care, 1996
- Patients' Expectations for Medical Care: An Expanded Formulation Based on Review of the LiteratureMedical Care Research and Review, 1996
- Statistics notes: Multiple significance tests: the Bonferroni methodBMJ, 1995
- Patient views on quality care in general practice: Literature reviewSocial Science & Medicine, 1994
- Diabetes care: who are the experts?Quality and Safety in Health Care, 1992
- Priorities in Primary Health Care the Views of Patients, Politicians and Health Care ProfessionalsScandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, 1985
- Patient Requests and ExpectationsMedical Care, 1984
- Results of a needs assessment strategy in developing a family practice program in an inner-city community.1980
- Perceptions of the family physician by patients and family physicians.1980
- Effects of Acquiescent Response Set on Patient Satisfaction RatingsMedical Care, 1978