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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Physician practice style patterns with established patients: determinants and differences between family practice and general internal medicine residents.
- K D Bertakis, J A Robbins, E J Callahan, L J Helms, and R Azari.
- Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of California, Davis, USA. kdbertakis@ucdavis.edu
- Fam Med. 1999 Mar 1;31(3):187-94.
Background And ObjectivesThis paper examines the practice style patterns of family practice and internal medicine residents for established patient visits.MethodsNew adult patients (n = 509) were prospectively and randomly assigned to family practice or internal medicine clinics at a university medical center and followed for 1 year of care by resident physicians. Initial and return visits were videotaped, and physician practice styles were analyzed using the Davis Observation Code (DOC).ResultsResident physicians' practice styles with established patients during return visits were associated with various factors, depending on the DOC cluster of behaviors studied. These factors include patient gender, age, income, physical and mental health status, level of pain, number of return visits, and physician practice style displayed during the initial encounter. Family practice return visits had a greater emphasis on preventive services and counseling, compared with internal medicine return visits. Internists spent more visit time using technically oriented behaviors.ConclusionsPatient variables, as well as baseline physician behavior, have an important influence on physician practice styles during return patient visits. There are measurable differences in the established practice styles between family practice and internal medicine resident physicians, which may reflect differences in professional training programs.
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