What do general practice patients want when they present medically unexplained symptoms, and why do their doctors feel pressurized?
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Health care utilization and poor reassurance: potential predictors of somatoform disordersReasons for encounter and symptom diagnoses: a superior description of patients' problems in contrast to medically unexplained symptoms (MUS).General practitioners' responses to the initial presentation of medically unexplained symptoms: a quantitative analysis.Morbidity and doctor characteristics only partly explain the substantial healthcare expenditures of frequent attenders: a record linkage study between patient data and reimbursements data.General practitioners' views on reattribution for patients with medically unexplained symptoms: a questionnaire and qualitative study.In their own words: qualitative study of high-utilising primary care patients with medically unexplained symptoms.Explanation and relations. How do general practitioners deal with patients with persistent medically unexplained symptoms: a focus group studySevere MUPS in a sick-listed population: a cross-sectional study on prevalence, recognition, psychiatric co-morbidity and impairment.Patients with persistent medically unexplained physical symptoms: a descriptive study from Norwegian general practiceSick-listed employees with severe medically unexplained physical symptoms: burden or routine for the occupational health physician? A cross sectional study.A novel analytical strategy for patient-physician communication research: the one-with-many design.Children in chronic pain: promoting pediatric patients' symptom accounts in tertiary careExplanatory models of medically unexplained symptoms: a qualitative analysis of the literature.The treatment of patients with medically unexplained symptoms in primary care: a review of the literatureWhy do general practitioners decline training to improve management of medically unexplained symptoms?Junior doctors' experiences of managing patients with medically unexplained symptoms: a qualitative study.Encounters between medical specialists and patients with medically unexplained physical symptoms; influences of communication on patient outcomes and use of health care: a literature overview.The diagnosis and management of depression and anxiety in primary care: the need for a different framework.Adherence to health regimens among frequent attenders of Finnish healthcare.What do patients choose to tell their doctors? Qualitative analysis of potential barriers to reattributing medically unexplained symptomsPrimary care consultations about medically unexplained symptoms: how do patients indicate what they want?Health care utilization of mexican patients with medically unexplained physical symptomsLimits to truth-telling: neurologists' communication in conversion disorder.Searching for self: the layers and labels of panic disorder: a New Zealand study.Experts' opinions on the management of medically unexplained symptoms in primary care. A qualitative analysis of narrative reviews and scientific editorials.Somatic symptoms in consultation-liaison psychiatry.Social characteristics and care needs of older persons with medically unexplained symptoms: a case-control study.A qualitative analysis of explanatory models in medically unexplained physical symptoms presenting to a tertiary health care psychiatric facility in South India.Person-centered clinical practice.Factors facilitating patient satisfaction among women with medically unexplained long-term fatigue: A relational perspective.Clinical uncertainty: helping our learners.Medically unexplained symptoms in primary care: how can doctors help, not hinder?Medically unexplained symptoms: evidence, guidelines, and beyond.Challenges in the management of patients with medically unexplained symptoms in Poland: a qualitative study.'I'm more sick than my doctors think': ethical issues in managing somatization in developing countries.Initial responses of different health care professionals to various patients with headache: which are perceived as difficult?Patients repeatedly referred to secondary care with symptoms unexplained by organic disease: prevalence, characteristics and referral pattern.Placebo prescriptions are missed opportunities for doctor-patient communication.Medically unexplained symptoms presenting at secondary care--a comparison of white Europeans and people of South Asian ethnicity.Improving teaching about medically unexplained symptoms for newly qualified doctors in the UK: findings from a questionnaire survey and expert workshop.
P2860
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P2860
What do general practice patients want when they present medically unexplained symptoms, and why do their doctors feel pressurized?
description
2005 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2005年の論文
@ja
2005年論文
@yue
2005年論文
@zh-hant
2005年論文
@zh-hk
2005年論文
@zh-mo
2005年論文
@zh-tw
2005年论文
@wuu
2005年论文
@zh
2005年论文
@zh-cn
name
What do general practice patie ...... heir doctors feel pressurized?
@en
type
label
What do general practice patie ...... heir doctors feel pressurized?
@en
prefLabel
What do general practice patie ...... heir doctors feel pressurized?
@en
P2093
P1476
What do general practice patie ...... heir doctors feel pressurized?
@en
P2093
Adele Ring
Christopher F Dowrick
Gerry M Humphris
P304
255-60; discussion 261-2
P356
10.1016/J.JPSYCHORES.2005.03.004
P50
P577
2005-10-01T00:00:00Z