Scandinavian journal of primary health care
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Scand J Prim Health Care · Dec 2022
Daytime contacts and general practitioner consultations, and pain as a reason for encounter in children with cerebral palsy; a Norwegian national registry linkage study.
The aim of this study was to compare the prevalence of daytime contacts and consultations, and pain as a reason for encounter (RFE) with a general practitioner (GP), in children with cerebral palsy (CP) (cases) to that of the general paediatric population (controls). ⋯ Children with CP did not consult GPs more than the general paediatric population did. In consultations, GPs should ask for pain even if the child with CP or parent does not address pain. The local multidisciplinary team should encourage the family to consider consulting a GP if the child is in pain.KEY MESSAGESPrevalence of GP consultations in children with CP is similar to that of children in the general population.GPs perform more administrative work for children with CP than for their other paediatric patients.GPs code pain as an RFE less frequently in consultations with children with CP than in consultations with children in the general population.
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Scand J Prim Health Care · Sep 2022
Discovering strengths in patients with medically unexplained symptoms - a focus group study with general practitioners.
When patients suffer medically unexplained symptoms, consultations can be difficult and frustrating for both patient and GP. Acknowledging the patient as a co-subject can be particularly important when the symptoms remain unexplained. One way of seeing the patient as a co-subject is by recognizing any among their strong sides. ⋯ Acknowledging patients' strong sides can bolster GPs' ability to help patients with medically unexplained symptoms. However, the epistemic disadvantage of generalist expertise makes this hard to achieve. It is difficult for GPs to integrate person-centered perspectives with biomedical knowledge due to the privileged position of the latter. This seems to indicate a need for system-level innovations to increase the status of person-centered clinical work. Key pointsMUS is challenging for both patients and GPs mainly because of the incongruence between symptoms and the dominating biomedical model.GPs' focus on pathology and loss of function can prevent them from discovering patients' strengths.Awareness of patients' strengths can make consultations less demanding for GPs and enable them to provide better help.A conscious effort is needed to discover patients' strengths.
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Scand J Prim Health Care · Sep 2022
'But there are so many referrals which are totally … only generating work and irritation': a qualitative study of physicians' and nurses' experiences of work tasks in primary care in Sweden.
This study explored the perceptions of physicians and nurses in Swedish primary care regarding the legitimacy of their work tasks and the use of their professional competence. ⋯ Strained work situations and illegitimate work tasks may inflate discontentment and lead to negative work stress. Nevertheless, the staff felt that competence was used appropriately in the tasks considered legitimate.Key PointsPhysicians and nurses in primary care in Sweden described several work tasks as illegitimate.Physicians and nurses described problems with heavy workloads, resource shortages, electronic data-system challenges, inefficiencies and with cooperation and drawing the line between primary care and hospital care.Overall, physicians and nurses believed their individual expertise was used appropriately.To uphold sustainable working conditions and thoughtful use of staff competence, organisational measures, such as redistributing staff from hospital to primary care were proposed.
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Scand J Prim Health Care · Sep 2022
Hypertension treatment in the oldest-old: focus group interviews with Swedish general practitioners.
This study explored the considerations and experiences of Swedish General Practitioners (GPs) of hypertension treatment in patients 80 years and above. ⋯ Hypertension care for the oldest-old was experienced as complicated by GPs, due to the need of balancing medical and humanistic considerations. The GP's clinical experience and the received support were of importance when making the treatment decision based on risk-benefit balancing and communication with the patient.Key pointsGPs experienced the task of caring for the oldest-old patients with hypertension as complicated.Patient factors like multimorbidity, polypharmacy, behavioural factors and the patient's condition of daily life were identified.Clinical experience and the experienced support at the PHCC were discussed as important for the GPs' treatment decision.Treatment decisions for the oldest-old patients with hypertension were based on risk-benefit balancing and communication with the patients.