Utilization of physician services for dermatologic complaints. The United States, 1974
- 1 August 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Dermatology
- Vol. 113 (8) , 1062-1066
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archderm.113.8.1062
Abstract
The National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey provides data on the "who," "for what complaint," and "to whom" for office visits to office-based physicians. In 1974, complaints referable to the skin accounted for 44 million physicians visits. This represents 7% of the 634 million visits to physician offices made during this period. Dermatologists accounted for 34% of all visits for skin complaints. General and family practitioners accounted for 40% of such encounters. Office visits prompted by dermatologic complaints were frequently less than 16 min long. Each office-based dermatologist accounted for an average of 5600 patient visits/yr. According to the dermatologist''s diagnosis, 31% of these visits were prompted by acne; warts accounted for an additional 8%.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: