Survey
shows many U.S. Physicians believe their own
Patients are receiving too much care
Newswise, September 28, 2011 — A survey of
U.S. primary care physicians shows that many
believe that their own patients are
receiving too much medical care and many
feel that malpractice reform, realignment of
financial incentives and having more time
with patients could reduce pressures on
physicians to do more than they feel is
needed, according to a report in the
September 26 issue of Archives of
Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
“Per capita U.S. health care spending
exceeds, by a factor of two, that of the
average industrialized nation and is growing
at an unsustainable rate,” the authors write
as background information in the article.
“A number of health care epidemiologists and
economists, however, have suggested that a
substantial amount of U.S. health care is
actually unnecessary.”
The authors also note that the opinions on
rate of care of primary care physicians,
whom they acknowledge are the “frontline of
health care delivery,” are unknown.
Brenda E. Sirovich, M.D., M.S., and
colleagues from the VA Outcomes Group,
White River Junction, Vt., and the
Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy
and Clinical Practice, Lebanon, N.H.,
conducted a national mail survey of U.S.
primary care physicians identified from
a random sample of the American Medical
Association Physician Masterfile,
between June and December 2009.
Of the surveys mailed, 627 physicians
participated, for a response rate of 70
percent.
Nearly half (42 percent) of all survey
respondents believe that patients in their
own practice receive too much medical care,
while only 6 percent believe that their
patients receive too little care. Just over
half (52 percent) believe the amount of care
received is just right.
Additionally, 28 percent of respondents said
they personally were practicing more
aggressively than they would like, and 29
percent felt that other primary care
physicians in their community were
practicing too aggressively.
Forty-seven percent of respondents reported
that mid-level primary care clinicians
(nurse practitioners, physician assistants)
practice too aggressively, and 61 percent
felt that medical subspecialists practice
too aggressively.
Almost all physicians in the survey (95
percent) believe that primary care
physicians vary in their testing and
treatment of patients, and most (76 percent)
were interested in learning how their own
practice compared to those of other
physicians.
Study participants identified three factors
they believe cause physicians to practice
too aggressively: malpractice concerns (76
percent), clinical performance measures (52
percent) and inadequate time to spend with
patients (40 percent).
Eighty-three percent of physicians felt they
could easily be sued for failing to order a
test that was indicated, while 21 percent
felt that they could be sued for ordering a
test that was not indicated.
The authors conclude that their results show
that, “physicians are open to practicing
more conservatively.” They also note that,
“physicians believe they are paid to do more
and exposed to legal punishment if they do
less. Reimbursement systems should encourage
longer primary care physician visits and
telephone, e-mail and nursing follow-up,
rather than diagnostic intensity.”
Editor’s Note: This study was supported by a
Veterans Affairs Merit Review grant for
Investigator Initiated Research in HSR&D.
This study was also supported in part by a
grant from the National Institute of Aging
Please see the article for additional
information, including other authors, author
contributions and affiliations, financial
disclosures, funding and support, etc.
Invited Commentary: Nice Work if You Can Get
It
In an invited commentary, Calvin Chou, M.D.,
Ph.D., from the University of California,
San Francisco, and San Francisco Veterans
Affairs Medical Center, discusses the
results of the survey conducted by Sirovich
et al saying, “implicit in these findings is
a kind of trained helplessness – it seems
that physicians know they are practicing
aggressively but feel they have no
recourse.”
Dr. Chou offers a solution to overly
aggressive practicing writing, “perhaps
there are two specific approaches that
primary care physicians can use to decrease
aggressive practices: communication and
avoidance of burnout.” Communication is
important to patients, he notes, because
“instead of measuring effective diagnosis
and treatment outcomes, patients tend to
define quality of care in terms of the
quality of communication with members of
their health care team.”
Additionally, Chou notes that “mindfulness”
(defined as “a purposeful, nonjudgmental
ability to notice and observe occurrences in
the moment, to decrease reactivity to
difficult situations and to initiate action
with awareness and intention”) can increase
communication and decrease burnout writing
that, “a curriculum that trained primary
care physicians in mindfulness,
communication and self-awareness showed
decreased burnout, improved well-being
scores and increased capacity in relating
with patients.”
“In today’s high-paced care delivery system,
we cannot afford to spend more resources
supporting the status quo,” Chou concludes.
“Having mindful and effectively
communicative physicians in a system of care
that supports a common vision for quality
will be hard work, but we can get it if we
try.”