PMID: 16527111Mar 11, 2006Paper

The patient's right to information: influence of socio-professional factors in primary care

Atencion primaria
M D Pérez-CárcelesA Luna-Maldonado

Abstract

To describe the information provided by primary care doctors to their patients in different phases of the care provision process and to analyse any relationships with socio-professional factors. Descriptive, cross-sectional study based on postal questionnaire. Primary care centres in Murcia, Spain. 227 family physicians. Distribution of a questionnaire which includes: a) socio-professional variables (age, sex, marital status, years in practice, years in present post, work environment, previous training, number of patients on list, number of patients seen daily); b) an evaluation of job satisfaction (Likert scale) related to salary, career choice, immediate superiors and daily surgery; and c) the frequency with which information is provided to patients concerning diagnosis, prognosis, treatment, complementary examinations and personal, professional and family impact. The reply rate was 59%. The percentages of doctors who always provided information concerning diagnosis, prognosis, treatment, complementary examinations and person, professional and family impact was, 23.3%, 7%, 64.3%, 40.5%, and 9.7%, respectively. There was a direct and statistically significant relationship between job satisfaction and the information provided t...Continue Reading

Citations

Mar 27, 2010·Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice·Maria D Perez-CarcelesAurelio Luna
Mar 4, 2015·International Journal of Behavioral Medicine·Renée A ScheepersKiki M J M H Lombarts

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