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- Paul Stewart and Tom O'Dowd.
- Trinity College Dublin.
- Br J Gen Pract. 2002 Dec 1;52(485):1000-1.
AbstractThis study was based in an isolated rural practice, and it identified 107 frequent attenders (1.95% of the practice population), who created five times the consultation workload of a similar group matched for age and sex. The general practitioners (GPs) classified 60 (56%) of these patients as attending for clinically inexplicable reasons. This subgroup had higher rates of long-term medication and hospital referral, and more free access to primary health care. The study also identified very high levels of kinship and relationship by marriage within this group (47%).
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