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Family Practice Advance Access published online on August 20, 2008

Family Practice, doi:10.1093/fampra/cmn043
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org.

Heartlift patients? An interview-based study of GP trainers and the impact of ‘patients they like’

Margaret O'Riordana, John Skeltonb and Anne de la Croixb

a Irish College of General Practitioners, 4/5 Lincoln Place, Dublin, Ireland
b Interactive Studies Unit, Primary Care Clinical Sciences, School of Health and Population Sciences, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, UK

Correspondence to Margaret O'Riordan, Irish College of General Practitioners, 4/5 Lincoln Place, Dublin, Ireland; Email: drmor{at}iol.ie

Received 23 June 2008; Accepted 5 July 2008.


   Abstract

Background. The concept of the ‘heartsink patient’ is well known and much used when talking about general practice. The opposite of this type of patient, however, has been little explored.

Objective. To identify patient characteristics valued by GPs.

Methods. Structured interview to collect narratives from GPs of individual patients, analysed qualitatively through thematic analysis and word frequency.

Setting. Primary Care in Ireland.

Participants. GP trainers.

Main outcome measures. Emergent themes from four lead questions: Tell me about a patient you like, Tell me about the patient's personality, What have you learned about yourself as a GP?, What is different about being a GP as opposed to any other kind of doctor? In addition, a corpus linguistic analysis of word frequencies disclosed further themes, not identifiable on the surface of discourse.

Results. Ten themes were identified: GPs valued patients who were likeable, a challenge, involved them in negotiation of the doctor–patient relationship, were interesting or virtuous and had a positive effect. GPs valued their profession in that they were facilitators, gave and elicited loyalty, formed personal attachments and had a different perspective.

Conclusions. ‘Heartlift patients’ may be a robust concept, to counterbalance heartsink patients. Data collected are suitable for training, and could help GPs enhance a sense of vocation.


O'Riordan M, Skelton J, de la Croix A. Heartlift patients? An interview-based study of GP trainers and the impact of ‘patients they like’. Family Practice 2008; xx: xxx–xxx.


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