J Am Board Fam Med
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This study was conducted to assess family physicians' perception of the US Food and Drug Administration-approved mRNA Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccines, their plans to be vaccinated with an approved mRNA COVID-19 vaccine, and their support for vaccination of patients and family members. ⋯ Our findings suggest a significantly positive association between a physician's concerns and their willingness to be vaccinated with an approved mRNA COVID-19 vaccine. With the authorization of 2 new mRNA COVID-19 vaccines, future studies should investigate the number of physicians in our study who received the vaccine.
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Evidence suggests that clinicians may view or label patients as nonadherent in a biased manner. Therefore, we performed a retrospective cohort analysis exploring associations between patient demographics and zip code-level income with the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Version (ICD-10) diagnoses for nonadherence among type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) patients, comparing primary and specialty care settings. Providers in the primary care group included internal medicine and family medicine physicians. In the specialty care group, providers included endocrinologists and diabetologists only. ⋯ Black race, non-private insurance, and lower-income zip codes were associated with disproportionately high rates of nonadherence labeling in both primary and specialty management of T2DM, possibly suggestive of racial or class bias.
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Editorial
Practical Clinical Topics, Digging Deeper into COVID-19, Social Determinants of Health, and Equity.
As a discipline, we continue to learn lessons from Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-lessons for practice, systems, and patient care. This issue also includes articles focused on 2 other topics that attract increasing attention by family physicians. ⋯ Second, we see increasing evidence about opioid prescriptions in primary care. Multiple clinical articles are pertinent to family medicine, such as different implications of an elevated sedimentation rate compared with C-reactive protein, practice facilitation, adolescent vaccination, family physician accuracy with potentially malignant skin lesions, and more.
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There are many words for what physicians commonly refer to as Somatoform Disorder. However, none is particularly patient-centered; to greater or lesser extent, they are all framed by medical jargon. ⋯ Using examples from practice, the author notes how PRESSS combines simplicity, ambiguity, and directness in one non-stigmatizing, patient-focused word. Combined with a patient-centered manner of communication, the use of PRESSS can help create the kind of shared therapeutic presence that is so important when attending to patients who experience the bothersome, unrelenting symptoms these conditions suggest.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
The Relationship Between Social Determinants of Health and Functional Capacity in Adult Primary Care Patients With Multiple Chronic Conditions.
Social determinants of health (SDoH) including insecure access to food, housing, and financial resources are critical threats to overall health. We sought to examine this relationship among adult primary care patients with multiple chronic conditions. ⋯ Among primary care patients with chronic conditions, SDoH are associated with poorer functional capacity, independent of other social and demographic factors. Primary care offers a promising, if underused, opportunity to intervene in SDoH. There is a need for future studies to explore the role of screening and intervention by primary care providers to mitigate or prevent SDoH.