Communication in general practice: Differences between European countries

Atie van den Brink-Muinen, P. F.M. Verhaak, J. M. Bensing, O. Bahrs, M. Deveugele, L. Gask, N. Mead, F. Leiva-Fernandez, A. Perez, V. Messerli, L. Oppizzi, M. Peltenburg

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

71 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Background. Based on differences in national health care system characteristics such as the gatekeeping role of GPs (at the macrolevel) and on diverging GP and patient characteristics (at the microlevel), communication may differ between countries. Knowledge of the influence of these characteristics on doctor-patient communication will be important for setting European health care policies. Objectives. Our objectives were (i) to compare doctor-patient communication in general practice between European countries; and (ii) to investigate the influence of the gatekeeping system and GP and patient characteristics on doctor-patient communication in general practice. Methods. Fifteen patients per GP (in total 2825 patients) of 190 GPs in six European countries were included. Participating countries were The Netherlands, Spain, the UK (gatekeeping countries), Belgium, Germany and Switzerland (non-gatekeeping countries). Data were collected by means of patient and GP questionnaires and observation of videotaped consultations, and analysed by one-way and multilevel, multivariate analysis. Results. Differences in communication between countries were found in: affective and instrumental behaviour; biomedical and psychosocial talk; GPs' patient-directed gaze; and consultation length. The study showed that GPs' gatekeeping role (with registered patients) was less important for doctor-patient communication than was expected. Patient characteristics such as gender, age, having psychosocial problems, and familiarity between the doctor and the patient were the most important in explaining differences in communication. Conclusion. The gatekeeping role of GPs is hardly important in explaining doctor-patient communication. The relationship is more complex than expected. Patient and GP characteristics are more important. Cultural factors should be included in future studies.

Idioma originalInglés estadounidense
Páginas (desde-hasta)478-485
Número de páginas8
PublicaciónFamily Practice
Volumen20
N.º4
DOI
EstadoPublicada - ago. 2003
Publicado de forma externa

Áreas temáticas de ASJC Scopus

  • Medicina de familia

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