Family Practice, Vol 15, 198-204, Copyright © 1998 by World Organization of Family Doctors
PL Heywood, GC Blackie, IH Cameron and AC Dowell
BACKGROUND: Although it is thought that frequent attendance to general
practice is associated with high use of health services, there is little
information on the health of these patients, their use of health services
or their perceptions of their service use. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to define
and identify the frequent attenders aged between 20 and 65 years in a
general practice population and to characterize their attributes and use of
services. METHODS: We carried out a retrospective analysis of case-notes to
identify a study population for interview and to be administrated the
Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire, General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-28)
and Nottingham Health Profile (NHP). The study was set in a UK teaching
general practice of 12 400 patients. The subjects were 132 patients who
attended 12 or more times in the study year and 102 age- and sex-matched
control patients of normal consulting frequency. RESULTS: The mean
frequency of attendance of very frequent attenders (VFAs) at 15 times per
year was five times that of control patients. A total of 86% of very
frequent attenders (VFAs) are female; 60% are married, compared with 78% of
controls. Only half of VFAs thought they consulted more often than average,
although 82% of 55 patients who consulted more than 24 times in 2 years
recognized that they consulted more often than average. Ninety-four per
cent of VFAs and 39% of controls had a chronic health problem. VFAs
received prescriptions from more therapeutic groups than controls and
overall received five times as many prescriptions. The rate of referral to
hospital specialists was five times greater for VFAs than for controls.
There were no differences on the Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire; 52% of
VFAs and 29% of controls were depressed on GHQ-28; and VFAs showed distress
on all modalities of well-being on NHP. CONCLUSIONS: This population of
VFAs has high levels of physical and psychological ill health. They consult
five times as often as the norm, receive five times as many prescriptions
and are referred to hospitals five times as often. It remains unanswered
whether this represents good general practice containment of the problem or
is a poor use of the resources. Given the high levels of depression and low
levels of well-being, perhaps strategies should be adopted to tackle these
first. If the average consulting rate of VFAs could be reduced by one
consultation per year, it would represent an overall reduction of 1% in the
GP's practice workload for this age group.
ORIGINAL CLINICAL RESEARCH
An assessment of the attributes of frequent attenders to general practice
Centre for Research in Primary Care, University of Leeds, UK.
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