scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of patient age on duration of medical encounters with physicians.

TLDR
The authors analyzed the USC/DRME Practice Study data to determine if the characteristics of physician patient encounters change with patient age; the only significant change observed was a decline in encounter time for patients 65 years of age and older compared with those 45 through 64 years of Age.
Abstract
The authors analyzed the USC/DRME Practice Study data to determine if the characteristics of physician patient encounters change with patient age. The only significant change observed was a decline in encounter time for patients 65 years of age and older compared with those 45 through 64 years of age. This decrease was significant for raw data and for data weighted for the number of physicians of various types and standardized for complexity of case mix in various age groups, also for both nonhospital and hospital encounters and for almost all classes of encounters. Three types of generalists and four types of medical subspecialists were studied; encounter times for all types were, for patients 65 and older, either the same as or less than those for patients 45 through 64. The observed phenomenon may reflect a conscious decision on the part of some physicians to allot less time to elderly patients. THE PROPORTION of the population that is 65 years of age or older is growing. By the end of the century, this group will account for 12 per cent of the country's citizens, almost half of them being over 75. Little is known about the quality of care provided by physicians to elderly patients. What data there are suggest that it may be less attentive than for younger patients. Existing data on the medical care provided to

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Patient and visit characteristics related to physicians' participatory decision-making style. Results from the Medical Outcomes Study.

TL;DR: The elderly and young adult patients, patients with high school education or less, minority patients, and male patients had the least participatory visits with their physicians, according to the baseline cross-sectional survey of the Medical Outcomes Study.
Journal ArticleDOI

Delirium: a symptom of how hospital care is failing older persons and a window to improve quality of hospital care.

TL;DR: It is identified how future trends and cost-containment practices may exacerbate the problem of delirium and how education and awareness of its clinical implications can improve the quality of hospital care for older persons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Perceived Efficacy in Patient-Physician Interactions (PEPPI): Validation of an Instrument in Older Persons

TL;DR: A brief instrument is developed – the Perceived Efficacy in Patient‐Physician Interactions Questionnaire (PEPPI) – to measure older patients' self‐efficacy in obtaining medical information and attention to their medical concerns from physicians.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adjusting for patient characteristics when analyzing reports from patients about hospital care.

TL;DR: The impact of adjusting for patient characteristics on hospital rankings was small, although a larger impact would be expected when comparing hospitals with more variability in types of patients, and the recommend adjusting at least for the most important predictors, such as age and health status.
Journal ArticleDOI

Managing an uncertain illness trajectory in old age: patients' and physicians' views of stroke.

TL;DR: The anticipation of recovery by persons who have had strokes and the letdown when recovery does not occur reflect critical dilemmas in biomedicine and in society itself that have implications for health policy.
References
More filters
Book

The House of God

Samuel Shem
TL;DR: The House of God as mentioned in this paper is still a laugh-out-loud piece of work, although written over thirty years ago, and its protagonist, Dr. Cox, is closely modelled on Basch's mentor, "the fat man".
Journal ArticleDOI

The Future Need for Geriatric Manpower in the United States

TL;DR: Estimates of the needs for medical geriatric manpower under four different models suggest that the United States will require between 7000 and 10,300 geriatricians by the year 1990; the best intermediate figure is about 8000.
Journal ArticleDOI

A National Study of Medical and Surgical Specialties: II. Description of the Survey Instrument

TL;DR: The survey instrument used in the national study of physician activities conducted by the University of Southern California, Division of Research in Medical Education, is a log-diary in which physicians kept a record of their actual professional activities.
Journal ArticleDOI

A national study of medical and surgical specialties. I. Background purpose, and methodology.

TL;DR: The University of Southern California is conducting a national survey of physicians involving the collection and analysis of detailed data on the activities and practice characteristics of generalists, medical specialists, and surgical specialists of different types.
Related Papers (5)