Invitation to attend a health check in a general practice setting: the views of a cohort of non-attenders.
- 1 February 1988
- journal article
- Vol. 38 (307) , 57-60
Abstract
Two hundred and fifty-nine men and women aged 20-45 years who did not respond to an offer from their general practitioner for a health check were interviewed at home to explore the reasons for non-response. There was no support for the view that the invitation aroused anxiety or that the administrative arrangements had been a barrier to acceptance. Many subjects were not really interested (44%) or just forgot to attend (24%). Crises at work or home (26%) and current attendance at a doctor (16%) were other reasons offered, while 11% felt screening to be in appropriate. There is little that can be done to change these rates except by a shift of public opinion to more consumer demand for health checks or by more opportunistic health checks when people attend their doctors for other reasons. The dangers of marketing health checks to increase consumer demand are discussed in the light of these findings and other work.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Invitation to attend a health check in a general practice setting: comparison of attenders and non-attenders.1988
- Health Promotion and the Human Response to Loss: Clinical Implications of a Decade of Primary Health Care ResearchFamily Practice, 1987
- Attendance for cervical screening—Whose problem?Social Science & Medicine, 1985
- Women who decline breast screening.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1984
- Attendance at a breast screening clinic: a problem of administration or attitudes.BMJ, 1982
- Hypertension labeling and sense of well-being.American Journal of Public Health, 1981
- The Effect of Income on Use of Preventive Care: An Evaluation of Alternative ExplanationsJournal of Health and Social Behavior, 1979
- Motivation to participate in cancer screening programmes.1979
- Increased Absenteeism from Work after Detection and Labeling of Hypertensive PatientsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1978
- VALIDATION OF SCREENING PROCEDURESBritish Medical Bulletin, 1971