Academia and Clinic
1 November 1984

The Effect of Physician Behavior on the Collection of Data

Publication: Annals of Internal Medicine
Volume 101, Number 5

Abstract

Determining the patient's major reasons for seeking care is of critical importance in a successful medical encounter. To study the physician's role in soliciting and developing the patient's concerns at the outset of a clinical encounter, 74 office visits were recorded. In only 17 (23%) of the visits was the patient provided the opportunity to complete his or her opening statement of concerns. In 51 (69%) of the visits the physician interrupted the patient's statement and directed questions toward a specific concern; in only 1 of these 51 visits was the patient afforded the opportunity to complete the opening statement. In six (8%) return visits, no solicitation whatever was made. Physicians play an active role in regulating the quantity of information elicited at the beginning of the clinical encounter, and use closed-ended questioning to control the discourse. The consequence of this controlled style is the premature interruption of patients, resulting in the potential loss of relevant information.

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Information & Authors

Information

Published In

cover image Annals of Internal Medicine
Annals of Internal Medicine
Volume 101Number 51 November 1984
Pages: 692 - 696

History

Published in issue: 1 November 1984
Published online: 1 December 2008

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Authors

Affiliations

HOWARD B. BECKMAN, M.D.
RICHARD M. FRANKEL, Ph.D.
▸From the Division of General Internal Medicine and the Primary Care Internal Medicine Training Program, Wayne State University School of Medicine, and the Detroit Receiving Hospital and University Health Center; Detroit, Michigan.

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HOWARD B. BECKMAN, RICHARD M. FRANKEL. The Effect of Physician Behavior on the Collection of Data. Ann Intern Med.1984;101:692-696. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-101-5-692

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