• JAMA · Sep 1998

    Curbside consultation practices and attitudes among primary care physicians and medical subspecialists.

    • D Kuo, D R Gifford, and M D Stein.
    • Department of Medicine, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA. dkuo@aol.com
    • JAMA. 1998 Sep 9; 280 (10): 905-9.

    ContextInformal (curbside) consultations are an integral part of medical culture and may be of great value to patients and primary care physicians. However, little is known about physicians' behavior or attitudes toward curbside consultation.ObjectiveTo describe and compare curbside consultation practices and attitudes among primary care physicians and medical subspecialists.DesignSurvey mailed in June 1997.ParticipantsOf 286 primary care physicians and 252 subspecialists practicing in Rhode Island, 213 primary care physicians and 200 subspecialists responded (response rate, 76.8%).Main Outcome MeasuresSelf-reported practices of, reasons for, and attitudes about curbside consultation.ResultsOf primary care physicians, 70.4% (150/213) and 87.5% (175/200) of subspecialists reported participating in at least 1 curbside consultation during the previous week. In the previous week, primary care physicians obtained 3.2 curbside consultations, whereas subspecialists received 3.6 requests for curbside consultations. Subspecialties most frequently involved in curbside consultations were cardiology, gastroenterology, and infectious diseases; subspecialties that were requested to provide curbside consultations more often than they were formally consulted were endocrinology, infectious diseases, and rheumatology. Curbside consultations were most often used to select appropriate diagnostic tests and treatment plans and to determine the need for formal consultation. Subspecialists perceived more often than primary care physicians that information communicated in curbside consultations was insufficient (80.2% vs 49.8%; P<.001) and that important clinical detail was not described (77.6% vs 43.5%; P<.001). More subspecialists than primary care physicians felt that curbside consultations were essential for maintaining good relationships with other physicians (77.2% vs 38.6%; P<.001).ConclusionsCurbside consultation serves important functions in the practice of medicine. Despite the widespread use of curbside consultation, disagreement exists between primary care physicians and subspecialists as to the role of curbside consultation and the quality of the information exchanged.

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