Objective:
To assess the prevalence and characteristics of patients perceived as difficult by physicians in primary care settings, highlighting the importance of this understanding for improving patient care.
Approach:
- 17% of primary care patients are perceived as difficult, with significant implications for care.
- Higher prevalence among patients with depression (twice as likely), anxiety, personality disorders (more than twice as likely), and chronic pain, indicating a need for targeted interventions.
- 33% prevalence in patients with medically unexplained symptoms and 41% in chronic pain patients receiving opioids, suggesting a critical area for provider awareness.
- Less experienced providers rated more encounters as difficult, highlighting the need for training.
- Patients labeled as difficult reported worse outcomes, including unmet expectations and lower satisfaction, emphasizing the importance of effective communication.
- Study quality varied, with only 47% using random sampling, which may limit the generalizability of the findings.
- Outcome reporting bias affected secondary analyses, potentially skewing results.
- Prevalence estimates varied widely across different methods, indicating the need for standardized assessment tools.
Key Findings:
Interpretation:
The perception of difficulty in patients is influenced by their mental health status and the experience level of the provider, underscoring the need for better training and support for physicians to enhance patient outcomes.
Limitations:
Conclusion:
Patients perceived as difficult often have chronic conditions and mental health issues, necessitating improved communication and care strategies from providers to enhance patient satisfaction and outcomes.
Sources:
This content is an AI-generated, fully rewritten summary based on a published scholarly article. It does not reproduce the original text and is not a substitute for the original publication. Readers are encouraged to consult the source for full context, data, and methodology.