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Journal ArticleDOI

Hidden reasons some patients visit doctors.

Arthur J. Barsky
- 01 Apr 1981 - 
- Vol. 94, pp 492-498
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TLDR
There are four clinical situations that should lead physicians to suspect these nonbiomedical reasons for a visit, each with an area of historical inquiry that may be helpful.
Abstract
Patients obviously physicians seeking medical diagnosis and treatment. Yet they also obtain medical consultation because of upsetting events, social isolation, psychiatric disorder, and desire for health information. There are four clinical situations that should lead physicians to suspect these nonbiomedical reasons for a visit, each with an area of historical inquiry that may be helpful. First, some of these patients seem unduly troubled by their symptoms. Asking them what they imagine to be causing their illness may make the visit more intelligible. Second, whenever the act of making a medical diagnosis seems unimportant, the physician should ask the patient how he had hoped the doctor might help. Third, patients who express dissatisfaction with their medical care should be questioned about this, as they may be dissatisfied because their real motivation in seeking care has not been illuminated. Fourth, patients who initiate a visit without a change in clinical status should be asked about current life stresses.

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References
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Culture, Illness, and Care: Clinical Lessons from Anthropologic and Cross-Cultural Research

TL;DR: A limited set of concepts derived from anthropologic and cross-cultural research may provide an alternative framework for identifying issues that require resolution, including a fundamental distinction between disease and illness and the notion of the cultural construction of clinical reality.
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The de facto US mental health services system: a public health perspective.

TL;DR: This study analyzes available epidemiological data and recent mental health services research findings to estimate the percent of the population with a mental disorder and the proportion utilizing various types of specialty mental health and general medical treatment settings.
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The ecology of medical care

TL;DR: The current discussions about medical care appear largely concerned with two questions: is the burgeoning harvest of new knowledge fostered by immense public investment in medical research being delive...
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Social psychologic factors affecting the presentation of bodily complaints.

TL;DR: Patients often recognize symptoms for which they seek medical assistance, but, on the basis of a history and physical and laboratory examination, the physician cannot obtain evidence to account for these symptoms.
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Second, whenever the act of making a medical diagnosis seems unimportant, the physician should ask the patient how he had hoped the doctor might help.