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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Factors associated with GPs' knowledge of their patients' socio-economic circumstances: a multilevel analysis.

Laurent RigalGéraldine BloyLudovic CasanovaHector FalcoffVirginie RingaVirginie Ringa

subject

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAttitude of Health PersonneleducationEconomicInsurance Coverage[SHS]Humanities and Social SciencesContinuing medical educationGeneral PractitionersInternshipSurveys and QuestionnairesMedicineHumansDuration (project management)Practice Patterns Physicians'AgedPhysician-Patient Relationsbusiness.industryMedical recordMultilevel modelSocial environmentMiddle Aged[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance3. Good healthWork (electrical)Socioeconomic FactorsFamily medicineGlobal Positioning SystemMultilevel AnalysisFemaleFranceFamily Practicebusiness

description

A paraître; International audience; Background. To determine appropriate management for individual patients, GPs are supposed to use their knowledge of the patient's socio-economic circumstances.Objective. To analyse factors associated with GPs' knowledge of these circumstances.Methods. Observational survey of GPs who were internship supervisors in the Paris metropolitan area. Each of 52 volunteer GPs completed a self-administered questionnaire about their own characteristics and randomly selected 70 patients from their patient list. Their knowledge was analysed as the agreement between the patients' and GPs' responses to questions about the patients' socio-economic characteristics in questionnaires completed by both groups. The association between agreement and the GPs' characteristics was analysed with a multilevel model adjusted for age, sex and the duration of the GP-patient relationship.Results. Agreement varied according to the socio-economic characteristics considered (from 51% to 90%) and between GPs. Globally, the GPs overestimated their patients' socio-economic level. GP characteristics associated with better agreement were sex (female), long consultations, the use of paper records or an automatic reminder system and participation in continuing medical education and in meetings to discuss difficult cases.Conclusion. Knowledge of some patient characteristics, such as their complementary health insurance coverage or perceived financial situation, should be improved because their overestimation may lead to care that is too expensive and thus result in the patients' abandonment of the treatment. Besides determining ways to help GPs to organize their work more effectively, it is important to study methods to help doctors identify their patients' social-economic circumstances more accurately in daily practice.

10.1093/fampra/cmv068https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26311704