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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Primary Care for Elderly People Why Do Doctors Find It So Hard

TLDR
Much of the difficulty participants experienced could be facilitated by changes in the health care delivery system and in medical education, and the voices of these physicians and the model resulting from the analysis can inform change.
Abstract
Purpose: Many primary care physicians find caring for elderly patients difficult. The goal of this study was to develop a detailed understanding of why physicians find primary care with elderly patients difficult. Design and Methods: We conducted in-depth interviews with 20 primary care physicians. Using an iterative approach based on grounded theory techniques, a multidisciplinary team analyzed the content of the interviews and developed a conceptual model of the difficulty. Results: Three major domains of difficulty emerged: (i) medical complexity and chronicity, (ii) personal and interpersonal challenges, and (iii) administrative burden. The greatest challenge occurred when difficulty in more than one area was present. Contextual conditions, such as the practice environment and the physician’s training and personal values, shaped the experience of providing care and how difficult it seemed. Implications: Much of the difficulty participants experienced could be facilitated by changes in the health care delivery system and in medical education. The voices of these physicians and the model resulting from our analysis can inform such change.

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Barriers and attitudes of family and internal medicine residents toward geriatric patients: a cross-sectional analytical study.

TL;DR: Most of the participants did not receive training in geriatric medicine, which mandates the need for early exposure to geriatric training in medical schools and the need to integrate this type of training within the major postgraduate training programs of the Saudi Commission for Health Specialties.
Journal ArticleDOI

Instrumental activity of daily living limitations and supports in a clinic population of low-income Puerto Rican elderly adults with chronic diseases.

TL;DR: In this sample of indigent Puerto Rican older adults, most needed help with any instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs), and although family members most often helped, one‐third had unmet or undermet needs.
Journal ArticleDOI

What Do Clinical Supervisors Require to Teach Residents in Family Medicine How to Care for Seniors

TL;DR: Clinicians’ continuing professional development (CPD) needs at family practice teaching clinics in the province of Quebec were assessed using an environmental scan of training programs at four family medicine departments, an expert panel to determine priority clinical situations for senior care, a supervisors survey to assess their perceived CPD needs, and interviews to help understand the rationale behind their needs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Qualitative Evaluation And Research Methods

TL;DR: The Nature of Qualitative Inquiry Theoretical Orientations Particularly Appropriate Qualitative Applications as mentioned in this paper, and Qualitative Interviewing: Qualitative Analysis and Interpretation Enhancing the quality and credibility of qualitative analysis and interpretation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Basics of qualitative research : grounded theory procedures and techniques

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the uses of literature and open coding techniques for enhancing theoretical sensitivity of theoretical studies, and give guidelines for judging a grounded theory study.
Journal Article

Qualitative evaluation and research methods

TL;DR: The Nature of Qualitative Inquiry Theoretical Orientations Particularly Appropriate Qualitative Applications as mentioned in this paper, and Qualitative Interviewing: Qualitative Analysis and Interpretation Enhancing the quality and credibility of qualitative analysis and interpretation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organizing care for patients with chronic illness.

TL;DR: The challenge is to organize these components into an integrated system of chronic illness care, which can be done most efficiently and effectively in primary care practice rather than requiring specialized systems of care.