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Preferences of patients for patient centred approach to consultation in primary care: observational study.

TLDR
Patients in primary care strongly want a patient centred approach, with communication, partnership, and health promotion—those vulnerable either psychosocially or because they are feeling unwell should be sensitive to patients who have a strong preference for patient centre.
Abstract
Objective To identify patient’s preferences for patient centred consultation in general practice. Design Questionnaire study. Setting Consecutive patients in the waiting room of three doctors’ surgeries. Main outcome measures Key domains of patient centredness from the patient perspective. Predictors of preferences for patient centredness, a prescription, and examination. Results 865 patients participated: 824 (95%) returned the pre›consultation questionnaire and were similar in demographic characteristic to national samples. Factor analysis identified three domains of patient preferences: communication (agreed with by 88›99%), partnership (77›87%), and health promotion (85›89%). Fewer wanted an examination (63%), and only a quarter wanted a prescription. As desire for a prescription was modestly associated with desire for good communication (odds ratio 1.20; 95% confidence interval 0.85 to 1.69), partnership (1.46; 1.01 to 2.09), and health promotion (1.61; 1.12 to 2.31) this study may have underestimated preferences for patient centredness compared with populations with stronger preferences for a prescription. Patients who strongly wanted good communication were more likely to feel unwell (very, moderately, and slightly unwell; odds ratios 1, 0.56, 0.39 respectively, z trend P < 0.001), be high attenders (1.70; 1.18 to 2.44), and have no paid work (1.84; 1.21 to 2.79). Strongly wanting partnership was also related to feeling unwell, worrying about the problem, high attendance, and no paid work; and health promotion to high attendance and worry. Conclusion Patients in primary care strongly want a patient centred approach, with communication, partnership, and health promotion. Doctors should be sensitive to patients who have a strong preference for patient centredness—those vulnerable either psychosocially or because they are feeling unwell.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating primary care behavioral counseling interventions: An evidence-based approach

TL;DR: Two separate analytic frameworks derived from screening topic tools that are developed to guide USPSTF behavioral topic reviews are presented and the use of the Five A's construct-assess, advise, agree, assist, and arrange-adapted from tobacco cessation interventions in clinical care provides a workable framework to report behavioral counseling intervention review findings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards a global definition of patient centred care.

Moira Stewart
- 24 Feb 2001 - 
TL;DR: Overall Little et al.s results indicate that patients do want patient-centered care that explores the patients main reason for the visit concerns and need for information and seeks an integrated understanding of the patients emotional needs and life issues.
Journal Article

Towards a global definition of patient centred care [editorial]

Stewart M
- 01 Jan 2001 - 
TL;DR: The authors found that patients do want patient-centered care that explores the patients main reason for the visit concerns and need for information; seeks an integrated understanding of the patients emotional needs and life issues; finds common ground on what the problem is and mutually agrees on management; enhances prevention and health promotion; and enhances the continuing relationship between the patient and the doctor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Observational study of effect of patient centredness and positive approach on outcomes of general practice consultations

TL;DR: If doctors don't provide a positive, patient centred approach patients will be less satisfied, less enabled, and may have greater symptom burden and higher rates of referral and use more health service resources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patient-Centered Care and Outcomes: A Systematic Review of the Literature

TL;DR: A systematic review of the PCC literature found mixed relationships between PCC and clinical outcomes, that is, some studies found significant relationships between specific elements of P CC and outcomes but others found no relationship.
References
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Book

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose three basic concepts: devising the items, selecting the items and selecting the responses, from items to scales, reliability and validity of the responses.
Journal Article

Effective physician-patient communication and health outcomes: a review

TL;DR: The quality of communication both in the history-taking segment of the visit and during discussion of the management plan was found to influence patient health outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The development of a six-item short-form of the state scale of the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI)

TL;DR: Two studies are reported describing the development of a short-form of the state scale of the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) for use in circumstances where the full-form is inappropriate, and the six-item version offers a briefer and just as acceptable scale for subjects while maintaining results that are comparable to those obtained using the full form.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decision aids for patients facing health treatment or screening decisions: systematic review

TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic review of randomised trials of patient decision aids in improving decision making and outcomes was conducted, which included randomized trials of interventions providing structured, detailed, and specific information on treatment or screening options and outcomes to aid decision making.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patient participation in decision-making.

TL;DR: It is proposed that methods be developed to evaluate a patient's level of "readiness" to participate in decision-making and that interventions that match the patient'slevel of readiness be applied to increase participation.
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