Practitioner productivity and the product content of medical care in publicly supported health centers.

The productivity-patient care content relationship in general practice and primary health care has never been a popular topic among medical practitioners. Yet the time a physician spends with patients or the number of patients treated in a fixed time interval would appear to be a critical factor in the content of this care. While current research has demonstrated a clear effect with respect to psychosocial care, the evidence with respect to technical care remains equivocal. The purpose of this study is to assess how physician production--measured as the number of patients seen per hour--affects the technical care performance of preventive and well care in 6 major patient management areas. The analysis uses data collected from 15 publicly supported, primary care centers in Pennsylvania, U.S.A. The care received by 1424 patients over a seven month period (4695 medical encounters) is reflected in the analysis; the work of 64 full time physicians is also represented. Using both linear and piecewise regression techniques, the analysis uncovered evidence that production levels do influence the performance of medical care procedures. The strength, direction and functional form of the relationship, however, depends upon the specific medical component under scrutiny. The impact of encounters per hour is especially telling for the provision of medical history items and preventive care directed at the female patients. The implications of these findings are discussed and inferences about the physician style dynamics which might link productivity and consultation content are presented.

[1]  J. Samet,et al.  Doctors' decisions and the cost of medical care: By John M. Eisenberg. Health Administration Press, Ann Arbor, Mich., 1986. 190 pp. No price given , 1987 .

[2]  Byrne,et al.  Doctors Talking to Patients , 1984 .

[3]  M. Carruthers,et al.  Study of the effect of time availability on the consultation. , 1989, The Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[4]  T. Lyons,et al.  The relationship of physicians' medical recording performance to their medical care performance. , 1974, Medical care.

[5]  M. Gold Effects of hospital-based primary care setting on internists' treatment of primary care episodes. , 1981, Health services research.

[6]  M. Morgan,et al.  Doctors' interviewing technique and its response to different booking time. , 1992, Family practice.

[7]  David Pendleton,et al.  The Consultation : an approach to learning and teaching , 1984 .

[8]  R. Morris,et al.  The "five minute" consultation: effect of time constraint on verbal communication. , 1986, British medical journal.

[9]  W. Edwards Deming,et al.  Out of the Crisis , 1982 .

[10]  Jennifer L. Hartnett,et al.  Managing Quality: The Strategic and Competitive Edge , 1988 .

[11]  M. Greenlick,et al.  Effect of Hospital-Based Primary Care Setting on Internists' Use of Inpatient Hospital Resources , 1981, Medical care.

[12]  P. Groenewegen,et al.  Workload and job satisfaction among general practitioners: a review of the literature. , 1991, Social science & medicine.

[13]  Palmer Rh,et al.  A review of methods for ambulatory medical care evaluations. , 1982 .

[14]  M. Goran,et al.  The Evolution of the PSRO Hospital Review System , 1979, Medical care.

[15]  J. Harvey Measuring Productivity in Professional Services , 1987 .

[16]  R. Hetherington,et al.  Health insurance plans: Promise and performance , 1975 .

[17]  R. Grol,et al.  Work satisfaction of general practitioners and the quality of patient care. , 1985, Family practice.

[18]  R. Pineault The Effect of Prepaid Group Practice on Physicians' Utilization Behavior , 1976, Medical care.

[19]  I. Moscovice,et al.  The Physician as Gatekeeper: Determinants of Physicians' Hospitalization Rates , 1984, Medical care.

[20]  Byron E. Bork,et al.  Medical Records, Medical Education, and Patient Care , 1975 .

[21]  M. Massagli,et al.  Primary-care physicians' affective orientation toward their patients. , 1979, Journal of health and social behavior.

[22]  P. Groenewegen,et al.  Professional reimbursement and management of time in general practice. An international comparison. , 1992, Social science & medicine.

[23]  R. Palmer,et al.  Individual and Institutional Variables Which May Serve as Indicators of Quality of Medical Care , 1979, Medical care.

[24]  J. Dolovich,et al.  The need for extended treatment of anaphylaxis. , 1980, Canadian Medical Association journal.

[25]  A. Porter,et al.  Attitudes to medical care, the organization of work, and stress among general practitioners. , 1992, The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[26]  Patricia L. Smith Splines as a Useful and Convenient Statistical Tool , 1979 .

[27]  Z. Ben-Sira,et al.  The function of the professional's affective behavior in client satisfaction: a revised approach to social interaction theory. , 1976, Journal of health and social behavior.

[28]  Everett E. Adam,et al.  Productivity and Quality: Measurement As a Basis for Improvement , 1981 .

[29]  J. Forbes,et al.  Quality and the use of time in general practice: widening the discussion. , 1989, BMJ.

[30]  Daniel G. Hotard Quality and productivity: An examination of some relationships , 1988 .

[31]  A. Wilson,et al.  Health promotion in the general practice consultation: a minute makes a difference. , 1992, BMJ.

[32]  A. Porter,et al.  Factors influencing waiting times and consultation times in general practice. , 1991, The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[33]  J. Najman,et al.  Patient characteristics negatively stereotyped by doctors. , 1982, Social science & medicine.

[34]  M. Calnan,et al.  The economy of time in general practice: an assessment of the influence of list size. , 1988, Social science & medicine.

[35]  D. Mechanic The orginization of medical practice and practice orientations among physicians in prepaid and nonprepaid primary care settings. , 1975, Medical care.

[36]  M. Greenlick,et al.  Determinants of medical care utilization: physicians' use of laboratory services. , 1972, American journal of public health.

[37]  H. Waitzkin Information giving in medical care. , 1985, Journal of health and social behavior.

[38]  Patient variable biases in clinical judgment: conceptual overview and methodological considerations. , 1989 .

[39]  J. Magidson Some Common Pitfalls in Causal Analysis of Categorical Data , 1982 .

[40]  R. Street,et al.  Information-giving in medical consultations: the influence of patients' communicative styles and personal characteristics. , 1991, Social science & medicine.

[41]  R. Klein,et al.  Explaining outputs of primary health care: population and practice factors. , 1991, BMJ.

[42]  J. Mckinlay,et al.  Bringing social structure back into clinical decision making. , 1991, Social science & medicine.

[43]  J. Gonnella Practice and Performance: An Assessment of Ambulatory Care , 1980 .

[44]  L Lasagna,et al.  The Relationship between Physician Characteristics and Prescribing Appropriateness , 1972, Medical care.

[45]  A. Hartzema,et al.  Nonmedical Factors Associated With the Prescribing Volume Among Family Practitioners in an HMO , 1983, Medical care.